Hara filamentosa? ID problem?
- medaka
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Hara filamentosa? ID problem?
What references were used, for the new pictures of Hara filamentosa?
what now makes the one I bred a few years back Hara filamentosa?
and also what is the type with the long filament on the top ray of its caudal fin shown in the CSG(UK) forum gallery
http://www.catfishstudygroup.org/images ... ntosa2.jpg
&
http://www.catfishstudygroup.org/images ... entosa.jpg
what now makes the one I bred a few years back Hara filamentosa?
and also what is the type with the long filament on the top ray of its caudal fin shown in the CSG(UK) forum gallery
http://www.catfishstudygroup.org/images ... ntosa2.jpg
&
http://www.catfishstudygroup.org/images ... entosa.jpg
I ‘Doc I can’t stop singing The Green, Green Grass of Home’
“That sounds like Tom Jones syndrome.
‘Is it common?’
“It’s not unusual.”
“That sounds like Tom Jones syndrome.
‘Is it common?’
“It’s not unusual.”
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Silurus
There seems to me that there are small differences in these two specimens.
The first one appears to be less in depth from the dorsal base, and the caudal fin lobes are more rounded, in comparison to the second type, also the markings in the caudal fin seems to differ, in your opinion
Are the differences there; or is it just me. If it is so, it just compounds the problem of what is Hara filamentosa, ?
http://www.catfishstudygroup.org/images ... entosa.jpg
&
http://gallery.pethobbyist.com/data/3772IMG_3207.jpg
Also from the link given by kamphol in his post. Can I take it that the original holotype is no longer available ?
There seems to me that there are small differences in these two specimens.
The first one appears to be less in depth from the dorsal base, and the caudal fin lobes are more rounded, in comparison to the second type, also the markings in the caudal fin seems to differ, in your opinion
Are the differences there; or is it just me. If it is so, it just compounds the problem of what is Hara filamentosa, ?
http://www.catfishstudygroup.org/images ... entosa.jpg
&
http://gallery.pethobbyist.com/data/3772IMG_3207.jpg
Also from the link given by kamphol in his post. Can I take it that the original holotype is no longer available ?
I ‘Doc I can’t stop singing The Green, Green Grass of Home’
“That sounds like Tom Jones syndrome.
‘Is it common?’
“It’s not unusual.”
“That sounds like Tom Jones syndrome.
‘Is it common?’
“It’s not unusual.”
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We've seen this in other species of Hara too; specifically from the NE India trip.
Jools
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What we _really_ need is either a CotM or maybe better yet a replacement article that deals with all moth cats pulling together a species by species ID guide and some of Medaka's breeding experiences.Silurus wrote:This means that Shane's article on the identification of the giant moth cat isn't quite correct and may need to be either corrected or taken offline.
I'm happy to facilitate this, however, of there are taxonomic changes in the near future (next few months) then perhaps the best course of action would be to pull the SW article in the meantime.
Jools
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- medaka
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Erm.
I now have got a live collection of six 'differing' types of mothcats.
What I have noted so far may or may not prove valid. and Iam still working on them. I had hoped earlier in the year to complete my findings by this august, but alas due to a variety of factors this will not be the case. at the moment I am awaiting some reference material from India.
Please no one take offense,
At this moment i have no wish to expand on this anymore . I hope you all will understand. but if any one has any spare scientific descriptive documentation on these fishes, i would love to see them.
saying this I think that there may be many more types yet to be reported on. I do remember seeing a very large "mothcat" (approx 150mm SL) on a show bench maybe 8 years ago now, unfortunatly no photo was taken of it. if I remember there wasnt much in the way of markings on it. It was sort of grey all over.
Also another puzzler, fish base had a photo of hara horai, which looked like what silurus said could be pseudolaguvia, this fish is elongated and small. (jools there is a pic in the album) this fish has markings to body and fins akin to mothcats not like the markings on the other pseudolaguvia.
I now have got a live collection of six 'differing' types of mothcats.
What I have noted so far may or may not prove valid. and Iam still working on them. I had hoped earlier in the year to complete my findings by this august, but alas due to a variety of factors this will not be the case. at the moment I am awaiting some reference material from India.
Please no one take offense,
At this moment i have no wish to expand on this anymore . I hope you all will understand. but if any one has any spare scientific descriptive documentation on these fishes, i would love to see them.
saying this I think that there may be many more types yet to be reported on. I do remember seeing a very large "mothcat" (approx 150mm SL) on a show bench maybe 8 years ago now, unfortunatly no photo was taken of it. if I remember there wasnt much in the way of markings on it. It was sort of grey all over.
Also another puzzler, fish base had a photo of hara horai, which looked like what silurus said could be pseudolaguvia, this fish is elongated and small. (jools there is a pic in the album) this fish has markings to body and fins akin to mothcats not like the markings on the other pseudolaguvia.
I ‘Doc I can’t stop singing The Green, Green Grass of Home’
“That sounds like Tom Jones syndrome.
‘Is it common?’
“It’s not unusual.”
“That sounds like Tom Jones syndrome.
‘Is it common?’
“It’s not unusual.”
- medaka
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This is the little one I am on about
http://www.dignall.com/gallery/medaka/ereth_007
and this is where the silurus post I refer to is
http://www.planetcatfish.com/forum/view ... ght=#40366
btw i am at present inbetween changing computer systems so sorry if I only pay fleeting visits to PC :
http://www.dignall.com/gallery/medaka/ereth_007
and this is where the silurus post I refer to is
http://www.planetcatfish.com/forum/view ... ght=#40366
btw i am at present inbetween changing computer systems so sorry if I only pay fleeting visits to PC :
I ‘Doc I can’t stop singing The Green, Green Grass of Home’
“That sounds like Tom Jones syndrome.
‘Is it common?’
“It’s not unusual.”
“That sounds like Tom Jones syndrome.
‘Is it common?’
“It’s not unusual.”
- Dinyar
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The fish that is known in the trade as "Hara horai" is undoubtedly a Pseudolaguvia. Of this, even I have no doubt. To my eye, they look and behave just like other Pseudolaguvia, not Hara. One species sold as H. horai is shown in the Clog as P. ribeiroi. (I know because I took one of the Clog pictures and bought the fish from an Indian exporter as "H horai".) There may be other Pseudolaguvia species sold as "H horai", I'm not sure. That there may be other Hara and Pseudolaguvia species awaiting identification would not surprise me.medaka wrote:Also another puzzler, fish base had a photo of hara horai, which looked like what silurus said could be pseudolaguvia, this fish is elongated and small. (jools there is a pic in the album) this fish has markings to body and fins akin to mothcats not like the markings on the other pseudolaguvia.
Not that I doubt HH's ID of the fish pictured in my post above as the real Hara horai, but I too would be interested in seeing the original description and learning why HH finds that it's H horai.
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Re: Hara filamentosa? ID problem?
ID please. fish abt 2.5in TL. likely fm Thailand.
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Re: Hara filamentosa? ID problem?
Any input ?
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Re: Hara filamentosa? ID problem?
Can only be filamentosa at that size.
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Re: Hara filamentosa? ID problem?
Thanks.
btw, anyone can advise what is "red phase" ?
btw, anyone can advise what is "red phase" ?
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Re: Hara filamentosa? ID problem?
Red phase refers to individuals that are more reddish in color. I've only seen this in the Burmese species.
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Re: Hara filamentosa? ID problem?
Looks to me to be a very nice Erethistes Filamentosa
I ‘Doc I can’t stop singing The Green, Green Grass of Home’
“That sounds like Tom Jones syndrome.
‘Is it common?’
“It’s not unusual.”
“That sounds like Tom Jones syndrome.
‘Is it common?’
“It’s not unusual.”