I thought trilineatus and julii are the same fish but different names are used in different books.
I thought trilineatus and julii are the same fish but different names are used in different books.
If I remember rightly trilis & jullis are from different areas, fish collectors predominantely fish from the trillis area and rarely get fish from the julli area, but the odd julli does sometimes end up in the trili area. Jullis have spots, trilis have small reticulated lines, also the central line on a julli is usually broken and only reaches about half way down the body wheras on a trilli it's goes all the way to the tail. I think you can sometimes get trillis with spots(but it's not very common), so it really boils down to where they were captured. The corys in the picture as already stated are 100% definately trilineatus.
OK, I'm confused.
Well, I will be the first to admit that I inadvertently sold more than one group of a C. paleatus variant as C. longipinnis. I bought my breeders under that name, I had nothing to compare them to and they were markedly different than any C. paleatus I had seen previously. Upon having my fish ID's as NOT being the real McCoy, I refunded the money of all those who bought these fish from me. There was no intent to deceive anyone. These are uncharted waters and I'm nowhere near the "expert" that people make me out to be. I am quite capable of making mistakes and prove that on a daily basis.OK, I'm confused.
So am I.
I'm not really confused, I just found it very amusing.
I agree about peppers being sold as longipinnus. That is so going to happen.
Well, I will be the first to admit that I inadvertently sold more than one group of a C. paleatus variant as C. longipinnis. I bought my breeders under that name, I had nothing to compare them to and they were markedly different than any C. paleatus I had seen previously. Upon having my fish ID's as NOT being the real McCoy, I refunded the money of all those who bought these fish from me. There was no intent to deceive anyone. These are uncharted waters and I'm nowhere near the "expert" that people make me out to be. I am quite capable of making mistakes and prove that on a daily basis.OK, I'm confused.
So am I.
I'm not really confused, I just found it very amusing.
I agree about peppers being sold as longipinnus. That is so going to happen.
I now have "true" C. longipinnis, that have been seen in my fish room by Ian Fuller and are from a very reputable breeder. Now that I have the fish side-by-side, the differences are obvious, but again, I had no point of reference. I have advised all who bought the mis-ID'd fish from me, that they will have first crack at any fry I am fortunate enough to obtain through breeding.
I have apologized for my error and have done all I can, to make amends. - Frank
It's amazingly easy to tell a pygmaeus from a hastatus but my lfs has pygmaeus marked as hastatus. I gave up trying to tell them the one with the spot at the base of the tail is hastatus and the one with the long stripe down its side was pygmaeus but they didn't want to hear it. At least they had their habrosus marked correctly.