Did you know fantastic help is an anagram of Planet Catfish? This forum is for those of you with pictures of your catfish who are looking for help identifying them. There are many here to help and a firm ID is the first step towards keeping your catfish in the best conditions.
kamas88 wrote:L 144 is not a variant of the common ancistrus.
A lot of people believe what is commonly sold as L144 is in fact a variant of the common Ancistrus. The existence of longfin "L144" points in that direction too.
If it is/was a different species then at least a lot of hybridization was done.
It's true that xanthoristic common ancistrus are very often sold as "L 144" which they are not.
At least here in Germany I have so far not yet seen a single true L 144 in the shops.
Sometimes even albinos are sold as "L 144".
L 144 is a different species and there was not hybridization with common bristlenoses involved.
It was one wildcaught xanthoric male and it was crossed backed with normally coloured wildcaught females (from Paraguay).
I have never heard of longfinned (true) L 144.
These are two different species that only look similar as both have the same genetic defect.
I agree that its the common ancistrus,
and the listing on PC does have the L144 as being the albino variant.
Which is why I said ancistrus sp.
I am NO expert in the identification of L numbered fishes by any means there are MANY experts here.
However looking up L144 here on this site brings up a picture of the
fish Ghostarcher has. Right or wrong... Call it what you will..
from what I have read and followed on this site there is a lot of identification issues with this fish.
Don
Ok, again I submit that you are correct that his fish (and mine) are "Common Albino"
But what are they scientifically?
I ask because I do not know; I only know what they are sold as and you have both established that
they are NOT L144.
I appreciate your expertise here.
Don
I don't want to get drawn into this debate, but at the CSG convention two years ago, the Ancistrus cf L144 (lemon blue-eyes / black eyes or whatever you describe them - but not red eyed albino and not long finned) were presented in the flesh and determined (by Ingo and others who were present) to be a distinct species from the common A. sp.3 cf cirrhosus. They were therefore termed A.sp.4.
So far as I and others are concerned, the species commonly called L144 (A.sp.4) is distinct from A. sp.3, having different proportions, body shape, adult size, white edges to caudal and dorsal and breeding true (very rarely do you get any pigmented fry). There's not much more to say about its origin.
Common albino bristlenose (red-eyed, normal or long finned)are A.sp.3
CoryWally wrote:at the CSG convention two years ago, the Ancistrus cf L144 (lemon blue-eyes / black eyes or whatever you describe them - but not red eyed albino and not long finned) were presented in the flesh and determined (by Ingo and others who were present) to be a distinct species from the common A. sp.3 cf cirrhosus ... So far as I and others are concerned, the species commonly called L144 (A.sp.4) is distinct from A. sp.3, having different proportions, body shape, adult size, white edges to caudal and dorsal and breeding true (very rarely do you get any pigmented fry).
Hi Mark. This is the first I've heard of this. I actually DNA sequenced a yellow black-eyed bristlenose (i.e. false L144), and found it to be identical to the common bristlenose. See this thread here.