I was just on Corydoras World looking at the reclassification of Corydoras, and I discovered I have never kept a real Corydoras. The first fish I bought under the name was when I was 10, and he (well, I now know it was she) lived 12 years. I named it Scruffy.
I thought it was a Cory, and to the hobby it was. Corydoras was like a box new discoveries were thrown into until someone got around to sorting them. Now, the work has been done, and if we want to understand who is related to whom, we have some new names to take in. Scruffy was an Osteogaster aenea.
My next Cory was a julii, one of the oldest naming mistakes in the hobby as very few people have seen, let alone kept julii. Someone goofed 75 years ago, put the wrong name on the fish and now we even have "false julii", a head shaker. We do cling to mistakes in this hobby, largely because most of us don't care about the natural history of the fish we keep. I can't say now what I had, with no photos and 50 years since I got the fish, but it was certainly a Hoplisoma, probably trilineatum.
So here we are, with a pageant of names - Corydoras, Scleromystax, Hoplisoma, Osteogaster, Brochis, Aspidoras, Gastrodermus... each name carries info for those who care to dig. If you are digging through info to learn about your Cory (that popular name should stay around, I hope) get the Latin name and you'll find much better info. It always works that way with fish. Latin is no one's spoken first language, but it is a shared link for researchers of all language backgrounds.
I thought it was a Cory, and to the hobby it was. Corydoras was like a box new discoveries were thrown into until someone got around to sorting them. Now, the work has been done, and if we want to understand who is related to whom, we have some new names to take in. Scruffy was an Osteogaster aenea.
My next Cory was a julii, one of the oldest naming mistakes in the hobby as very few people have seen, let alone kept julii. Someone goofed 75 years ago, put the wrong name on the fish and now we even have "false julii", a head shaker. We do cling to mistakes in this hobby, largely because most of us don't care about the natural history of the fish we keep. I can't say now what I had, with no photos and 50 years since I got the fish, but it was certainly a Hoplisoma, probably trilineatum.
So here we are, with a pageant of names - Corydoras, Scleromystax, Hoplisoma, Osteogaster, Brochis, Aspidoras, Gastrodermus... each name carries info for those who care to dig. If you are digging through info to learn about your Cory (that popular name should stay around, I hope) get the Latin name and you'll find much better info. It always works that way with fish. Latin is no one's spoken first language, but it is a shared link for researchers of all language backgrounds.