Really C. julii?
- Fish Demon
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Really C. julii?
I found these corys at my LFS, and I have a good feeling that they are C. julii, but there is still some doubt. They are still young, with the biggest one being a bit over an inch long. They have mostly singular spots, but some of them are connected, as in C. trilineatus. The line on the side is broken, and the flanks have no vertical stripes, a trait that is normally seen in C. trilineatus. Also, they have a very short, round nose, which is more pronounced in C. julii
So would anyone care to give me a positive ID on them? Here are the pictures (they are nearly impossible to get pictures of now that they've settled in, so I had to take them out to get the good shots).
So would anyone care to give me a positive ID on them? Here are the pictures (they are nearly impossible to get pictures of now that they've settled in, so I had to take them out to get the good shots).
-Natalie
April 20, 2001
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April 20, 2001
Q: How tall is Cartman in real life?
A: Well, Cartman doesn't exist in real life, but if he did he'd be two feet tall.
- jurassic_pork
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- Fish Demon
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- jurassic_pork
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Fish Demon wrote:Ummm... C. ambiacus doesn't look much like C. julii at all...
Either that picture is not C.ambiacus or the cory handbook i have is pictured wrongly
C. ambiacus
<img src=http://www.longlivesoccer.com/westbromwichalbion.gif height=40>
- Coryman
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I have covered this ground many times before, C. julii is very infrequently imported and the chances of it turning up out of the blue in a LFS is very slim. Their natural range is in the eastern part of central Brazil near Alto Parnaiba in a small tributary of the Rio Parnaiba. When viewed from the front it is quite slim.
On the other hand C. trilineatus is a chunky looking fish, which has a very variable colour pattern, from bold wavey lines and blotches to quite fine spotting. The bigest difference is that C. trilineatus is found predominantly in Peru from the Rio Ampiyacu.
I would estimate that there is a distance of may be 2000 miles between the two species.
C. ambiacus has also been mentioned in this post, it is also a vary variable species but bares no resemblance at all to C. julii or C. trilineatus.
Ian
On the other hand C. trilineatus is a chunky looking fish, which has a very variable colour pattern, from bold wavey lines and blotches to quite fine spotting. The bigest difference is that C. trilineatus is found predominantly in Peru from the Rio Ampiyacu.
I would estimate that there is a distance of may be 2000 miles between the two species.
C. ambiacus has also been mentioned in this post, it is also a vary variable species but bares no resemblance at all to C. julii or C. trilineatus.
Ian
- Fish Demon
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