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A few months back, L200 changed name, again. But this time they split in in 2 different species, Hemiancistrus subviridis and Baryancistrus demantoides.
Which one is this?
I think it's Hemiancistrus subviridus, cause they don't have the orange in the fins. But the Bary should be a plant eating fish and the Hemiancistrus shouldn't be. Mine do eat plants(a lot, unfortunately), so which one is it?
The above animal is Baryancistrus demantoides. The amount and brightness of the orange to yellow tinge on the fins varys greatly.
-Shane
"My journey is at an end and the tale is told. The reader who has followed so faithfully and so far, they have the right to ask, what do I bring back? It can be summed up in three words. Concentrate upon Uganda."
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
"My journey is at an end and the tale is told. The reader who has followed so faithfully and so far, they have the right to ask, what do I bring back? It can be summed up in three words. Concentrate upon Uganda."
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
If they are the same fish you placed in your icon picture, IMO, they are hemiancistrus. The adipose-dorsal gap is a bit large. I assume, though, given the advice already given on the topic, that I'm wrong.
Jon wrote:If they are the same fish you placed in your icon picture, IMO, they are hemiancistrus. The adipose-dorsal gap is a bit large. I assume, though, given the advice already given on the topic, that I'm wrong.
nope, that's just a picture from the internet, because I didn't have a digital camera back then ;) I should change it ;)
edit: done ;)
Last edited by Rense on 06 Apr 2006, 15:43, edited 1 time in total.
My personal opinion - I only see Hemiancistrus Subviridis on your pictures.
No Highfins.
But at every foto, we see the fish from an angle that gives the impression, that the tail is rather big - like the tails on Highfins. But the gaps between adipose/dorsal fin indicate no highfins.
But you can better judge it IRL. Take a look and describe the distance. If no distance or only 1-2 millimetres - it is an Highfin. If almost an centimeter - it's an lowfin.
The true Highfins that I have seen - all show a dorsal extremely high. And a very big good developed tail.
Rense,
Line could easily be correct that differences in the angle the photos were taken at are influencing our identifications. Any chance of a side by side photo of the two fish above in a photo tank? That would help a lot.
-Shane
"My journey is at an end and the tale is told. The reader who has followed so faithfully and so far, they have the right to ask, what do I bring back? It can be summed up in three words. Concentrate upon Uganda."
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
Shane wrote:Rense,
Line could easily be correct that differences in the angle the photos were taken at are influencing our identifications. Any chance of a side by side photo of the two fish above in a photo tank? That would help a lot.
-Shane
I will try to take a shot of them side by side, if I took a fairly good picture, i'll post it again.
@Line: I've just watched and the gap is definitely more than the indicated 1 or 2 mm, I guess it's about 7 or 8 mm.
Jorge wrote:L128 and Hemiancistrus subviridis are very agressive fish with plants. They can destroy even strong plants like Anubias
ok, that explains it. I couldn't find that in the Cat-eLog, but I knew Baryancistrus is a planteater as well, that's why I first though it should be the B. demantoides.
These fish allow only Vallisneria gigantea in the tank, everything else is food. The Echinodorus had also become food ;)
Why don't somebody develope food tasting like Echinodorus - would be a great hit
Best Regards
Line
PS
Following works great with my L200 :
Vallisneria Spiralis
Echinodorus Bolivianus
Echinodorus Tennelus
Ceratophyllum demersum
Vallisneria Spiralis
Lots of possibilities - just avoid big leaved plants of Echinodorus family
thank you!
I've got V. gigantea in my tank, which they don't eat, and the same goes for the Ceratophyllum demersum. I've also got some E. tennelus, but I also have some Satanoperca which keep digging them out of the sand, but hey, I'll just throw some plants in occasionaly and I'll see which survives ;)
Because of problems with sand/current - I tried to plant the E. Tenellus in thin pieces of filtermaterial (you know - this black or blue foam stuff ?) - and a little sand to cover it all..
Perhaps this could work out with your Satanoperca ?
Because of problems with sand/current - I tried to plant the E. Tenellus in thin pieces of filtermaterial (you know - this black or blue foam stuff ?) - and a little sand to cover it all..
Perhaps this could work out with your Satanoperca ?
Best regards
Line
I could try it if my latest 'experiment' fails I've got a stone, laying on the roots right now. planted 3 days ago and they're stil standing, that's a record ;) thanx for the info