Bobtail Hej Can someone please help me with identifikation of which Geophagus species this is? I think they are G. brasiliensis or G. iporangensis - but now in their breeding color, i don't think there is at perfect match to either of these species... my fish does not have that much of black in the first 1 cm of their dorsal fin, and they have at bit of red under their gills. The fish are about 15-18 cm. Hope somebody can help. (reply in swedish is fine) :) YVczanbohwI&list=UUFH_2IvA_0ySf7dLic2o_Tw Regards Kim
DaRe Definitely from the Brasiliensis complex. Could be any of these in my view: Geophagus brasiliensis Geophagus iporangensis Geophagus itapicuruensis (har ett längre utdraget huvud där munnens form är spetsigare.) Geophagus obscurus Geophagus sp. "sao paolo" Geophagus sp. "rio sao francisco" eller Geophagus sp. "blue flash" Geophagus sp. "bahia red" (Time to add the undescribed ones into our register, I think!!) I don't have a good description of the differences between them.
DaRe I suppose the undescribed ones lack a description ;) but from a rumor point of view there should be some characters that is assume to differ. Anyone with some info here?
Kawasa Are these the same Geophagus that were swimming with the Festae?? I told you they were some extraordinary fishes :) Sorry but I have no idea exact which spices they are but one thing's for sure! They are damn beautiful ;)
Bobtail #4.. Yes its the same - they are just in breeding color now... You can have the fry, if you come to Denmark. :)
Kawasa #4.. Yes its the same - they are just in breeding color now... You can have the fry, if you come to Denmark. :) Thats very nice of you to offer :D Would love to have some of them, only problem is that it takes a few hours drive from Stockholm :-|
Erik-Ahlander Difficult when there is almost no scientific stuff published. My guess is that your fish, with a split lateral spot, is undiscribed, and possibly none of the "species" listed by David, but within that complex. Obviously it appears in the hobby. I can find pictures on internet. It may be a cultivated form, but it looks so distinct that I think it is a wild undescribed species. And, yes, it is beautiful! Also, from your movie it seems slightly less aggressive, compared with the "G. brasiliensis" occuring in the trade in the 1970s - whatever species that was... EDIT I don't think the fish in Kawasas movie is the same species.