Is this Liposarcus pardalis?
- Silurus
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Re: Smb doesnt know what this is...
Could somebody help me out on this: I've always wondered when somebody has a "common pleco" and mostly it is being identified as Liposarcus pardalis here. However, where I live (Finland), most commons are said to be Liposarcus multiradiatus. Why's that? What's the difference with these - or is there any? - how to tell them apart and why would it be so that in different parts the species vary (yes, due to imports of course, but most imports are centralised in Europe, I would think)?Caol_ila wrote:i think its Liposarcus pardalis...
And why L. multiradiatus is not featured in the cat-e-log at all?
I used to have a common (L. multiradiatus - I always thought), but she just died in August at the age of (appr.) 12 years with a tumor. She was examined (and put to sleep) at the local laboratory and diagnosed otherwise very healthy female, but with a large benigne tumor on her side.
- Silurus
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- Jools
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Not very scientific, but <I>L. multiradiatus</I> is a little browner too.
Jools
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OK guys, so you tell me which one was mine?
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A very nice LDA01 I think.doctorzeb wrote:A little irrelevant, but in the german forum link above, what is the L-number "andi" shows in his avatar.
ta
rob
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Yes, it was extremely painful to lose such an old friend, but in the end the tumor kept growing so I had to put end to her life. Couldn't do it myself (such a big fish!) and also wanted to know for sure what was wrong, so I delivered her to EELA, which is the National Veterinary and Food Research Institute here in Helsinki and they did the research. Examining 3 aquarium fish (brought together) costs only about 21 â?¬ so it's not much and at least then you know for sure.Caol_ila wrote:@sari Sad that your fish died like this but how much did this autopsy costs?
They have their website also in English, although not all the pages, so if you're looking for more info, check: http://www.eela.fi/en/index.html