And this in the Cat-eLog:

They don't look very alike...
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Mats
And this book also says that haugi has a large snout and well-developed lips. And I can't find any text which says that haugi has that dark area above humeral. Based on these I can't say this new one is haugi.Birger wrote:Fresh and Brackish water Fishes of Lower Guinea has them as "body and fins are uniformly brownish or with indistinct black spots. Young with large dark brown spots"
That's because that “dark area” is not the result of pigmentation, but merely a more translucent tympanum (the part of the swim bladder that is nearest the body wall). In a preserved specimen, that area would not show up as being significantly darker than the surrounding region.jippo wrote: And I can't find any text which says that haugi has that dark area above humeral
You forget barbels tend to grow allometrically — they are longer in young fish and tend to become shorter with age.jippo wrote: Not the best shot but looks like it has quite long barbels rather than short ones. And with haugi maxillary barbels should reach only beyond base of pectoral spine and are as long or only slightly shorter than head.
I think most light-colored synos will have that “dark area” because if the ground color of the body is light, the tympanum will tend to show up as in the photo.I have a list where are all synos that should have that dark area, I should add haugi to that list also?
So, you think I should add the brown/golden fish in the first photo to the Cat-eLog?Silurus wrote:Based on these conclusions, there is no compelling reason to suppose that the fish is not S. haugi.
You were probably asking HH, but I think so.So, you think I should add the brown/golden fish in the first photo to the Cat-eLog?
This makes sense. But is it possible that synos with this dark area has a thinner skin. I have some synos which had a very light color at LFS(stress color I think) and at my tank they turn very dark but still there is that dark area. And there is lots of light colored synos that doesn't have that dark area.Silurus wrote:I think most light-colored synos will have that “dark area” because if the ground color of the body is light, the tympanum will tend to show up as in the photo.I have a list where are all synos that should have that dark area, I should add haugi to that list also?
Jippo's opinion is always taken into account and valued by myself...so keep it upJipoo: I'm not at all ignoring your opinion - that may well be what triggers the "let's fix that then" part.
Absolutely - but I also think it's important to "decide something" - even if it turns out to be wrong later on, if we just discuss it forever, we don't actually get anywhere.Birger wrote:Jippo's opinion is always taken into account and valued by myself...so keep it up.
Very trueMatsP wrote:Absolutely - but I also think it's important to "decide something" - even if it turns out to be wrong later on, if we just discuss it forever, we don't actually get anywhere.Birger wrote:Jippo's opinion is always taken into account and valued by myself...so keep it up.
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Mats
Birger wrote:Jippo's opinion is always taken into account and valued by myself...so keep it upJipoo: I'm not at all ignoring your opinion - that may well be what triggers the "let's fix that then" part..
Birger
I'm very familiar with this. There is also many genuine riverine syno's that have tail like that. I have bastiani(eburneensis) that had black lobes on tail when I got it but after a while I hardly saw those black lobes. As I can see this was due to a different water parameters, mine pH is about 6.5 and it came from a tank where pH was around 7.5. On the other hand pleurops has always visible black lobes at every water parameter.sidguppy wrote:it's possible that one of the parents used to crate this hybrid is the haugi
but look at the tail......the hybrid has the telltale black parts that point at a Tanganyikan species used in the creation.
many hybrids are made by using Tanganyikan Syno's
For sure money is the main issue here. People are always asking where are the cheapest fishes or why this species is so expensive, hybrids are one solution for this. If genuine decora cost 30-40e you can get almost look alike hybrid decora for 3-6e. Not a bad business and most of the people are happy because they don't know they have "a fake product". As you all know this "lowest price sell best" is global and many industry are very deep in that. And I must admit that I do the same quite often when I go to grocery.sidguppy wrote:the reasons for this are simple: a few Tanganyikan syno's are easily bred, hence available and they are also very contrasting wich means that the hybrid is pretty and will make money
money's the bottomline at the hybrid menace; only fools (and unfortunately there are such) would make ugly unappetizing hybrids; most hybrids we know are very nice patterned.
they need to sell!