I wonder if it's ok if I chime in - because I have a pair of macmasteri that I'm suspecting are closer to 'wild type' than 'fish store' I'm new to apistogramma so I haven't seen much yet. Here are pictures of the male and female. He does have a taller, narrower oval type caudal spot, correct? This photo shows his usual type of markings but they often fade out almost completely just for a while and then come back. I absolutely love their colors and patterns. They just had their first brood of fry which are now 5 weeks old. APISTOGRAMMA MACMASTERI from a local individual who didn't seem to know or didn't want to tell me if they were wild caught or locally bred.Look at photos of the two species. A. macmasteri has a taller, narrower, roughly oval/rectangular spot. A. viejita has a shorter, wider, more squarish spot. That, along with body and fin shapes - plus DNA differences - separate the 2 closely related species. BTW, I don't think Oliver would appreciate you using one of his photos for your avatar. He can be, shall we say?, 'sensitive' about such things?
Seems everything with this fish heading to dead end, ted. LolI got a box of these in from the collector, but they were time bombs. They were harboring something and almost all of them fell apart about three weeks after they arrived. I heard from almost all the buyers the same week. Weird. The collector has since left the export house he was working for, and no longer has an avenue to export fish... but he will guide explorers!![]()