Everyone makes mistakes, but sometimes they last well beyond a human lifetime.
In the 1940s, importers of Corydoras catfish were sure they'd caught julii. My childhood fishbook, already yellowed and old, said there were four Corydoras species, in the entire Amazon. How little they knew back then. When importers realized they had never seen julii, a super rare fish until recently, they either continued selling all the spotted Cory species as julii, or invented the trade name "false julii" to cover their mistake. Probably, 99.whatever of the spotted Corys out there in the hobby aren't julii, but the real julii are true to themselves.
And we have false juliis, which is like saying the plains of Africa are full of striped false horses.
And around the same time, a beautiful dwarf Cichlid was found in Nigeria. Before that, a smaller, more colourful fish had been discovered farther south near the town of Kribi, in Cameroon. It was named a kribensis. The Nigerian fish was wrongly thought to be the same, and the hobby kribensis was created. Its name, btw, should be pulcher. So we have two kribensis in the hobby, the famous one (the false krib?) and the real one, a lovely fish no one buys because they think the false krib is real. Aaargh, since the real kribensis (which people called a taeniatus) may be my favourite Cichlid.
Have you encountered any other fish names that muddy the waters more than clearing them for us?
In the 1940s, importers of Corydoras catfish were sure they'd caught julii. My childhood fishbook, already yellowed and old, said there were four Corydoras species, in the entire Amazon. How little they knew back then. When importers realized they had never seen julii, a super rare fish until recently, they either continued selling all the spotted Cory species as julii, or invented the trade name "false julii" to cover their mistake. Probably, 99.whatever of the spotted Corys out there in the hobby aren't julii, but the real julii are true to themselves.
And we have false juliis, which is like saying the plains of Africa are full of striped false horses.
And around the same time, a beautiful dwarf Cichlid was found in Nigeria. Before that, a smaller, more colourful fish had been discovered farther south near the town of Kribi, in Cameroon. It was named a kribensis. The Nigerian fish was wrongly thought to be the same, and the hobby kribensis was created. Its name, btw, should be pulcher. So we have two kribensis in the hobby, the famous one (the false krib?) and the real one, a lovely fish no one buys because they think the false krib is real. Aaargh, since the real kribensis (which people called a taeniatus) may be my favourite Cichlid.
Have you encountered any other fish names that muddy the waters more than clearing them for us?