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Help with Apisto ID

U

U271

Guest
Hello, this is my first message.
Some weeks ago I bought 2 Apisto that were sold as A. Agasazzi "Peru".
They were 1,5 - 2 cm long and now they are about 3 cm.
It´s really dificult to take pictures of them but have one. It doesn´t seem an Agasazzi but I have no idea of wich apisto can be.
Can you help me?

AgasazziPeru.jpg
 

Apistt_ed

New Member
hello U271,

from your picture and what I can see, it looks a lot like A. trifasciata. You can definitely ID your fish if they have the distinct third band that runs from just behind the gill cover to the beginning of the anal fin. I can't see that in your picture but from the look of your fish and the lateral band and overall shape, I'm pretty sure it is A. trifasciata. If you google the name, you can compare your fish to other pictures on the net. cheers. john
 
U

U271

Guest
Thank you very much Apistt_ed. I´ll try to look to their third band.
It´s possible they bred with Apisto. macilensis?
 

blueblue

Active Member
5 Year Member
Messages
1,876
Location
Hong Kong
U271 said:
Thank you very much Apistt_ed. I´ll try to look to their third band.
It´s possible they bred with Apisto. macilensis?

The answer is yes. A cross-breeding between them has been reported by a hobbysit in Hong Kong. The cross-bred F1 looks very much like the trifasciata.
 

KenL

Member
5 Year Member
Messages
148
Is maciliensis the same as A. sp "mamore"?

The pic of your fish u271 does look like A.trifasciata to me.

Trifasciata was the first apisto I managed to breed successfully :)
 

Rolo

Active Member
5 Year Member
Messages
415
Location
Bremen, Germany
KenL said:
Is maciliensis the same as A. sp "mamore"?

It IS the same, if you mean the A. maciliensis sensu Römer.

But nobody knows, if this fish is the same, what HASEMANN described as A. trifasciata maciliense in 1911. Römers opinion is very doubtful, because the type-material is lost and the description is very short.

So it's better NOT to use the name A. maciliensis for the species. It's better to call them A. sp. "Mamoré" further on.

Staeck found A. trifasciata near the type locality, who could be A. maciliensis in his opinion, because their third lateral band wasn't seeable most time, if I remember correctly. So maybe it's just a synonyme. Other experts think, A. maciliensis could be a valid species (but not the same as A. sp. Mamoré)

best regards,
Rolo
 

Greg PL

New Member
5 Year Member
Messages
147
Location
Warsaw - Poland
Rolo said:
It IS the same, if you mean the A. maciliensis sensu Römer.
...
So it's better NOT to use the name A. maciliensis for the species. It's better to call them A. sp. "Mamoré" further on.

from what I saw (had in my fishtank) there are 2 morphs/species? of A. sp. "Mamore". one was bigger and with colors close to those of A. trifasciata, but with no 3rd stripe. the other is somewhat smaller and with fiery red tail.
size difference could be a matter of my memory or the specimens I got ;)
Mayland&Bork treated them as A. t. maciliensis, while Roemer calls them A. maciliensis, claiming that the offsprings of one pair can have red or blue tail. Not sure if it's true.
what does the new DATZ say about it?
 

Apistt_ed

New Member
it is true. I have had a pair of A. sp mamore who spawned and I did get a mix of the red tail and the blue in the same spawn. That's why I believe that it's not a different color morph but rather just differences in individual fishes.
 

Mike Wise

Moderator
Staff member
5 Year Member
Messages
11,222
Location
Denver, Colorado, U.S.A.
The new DATZ book says it is uncertain if A. trifasciata maciliensis is the same a A. sp. Mamoré. A. trifasciata & A. sp. Mamoré are obviously different species. I personally don't believe that Mamoré is maciliensis. I can only base this on reading the original descriptions of A. t. maciliensis & A. t. haroldschultzi, and comparing them with A. sp. Mamoré. The dark markings don't match very well, nor does the distribution of the forms. Jeff Cardwell brought back from Bolivia some lake-dwelling A. trifasciata (same biotope as maciliensis & haraldschultzi) that did not show a third diagonal band when alive (similar to preserved specimens of maciliensis & haraldschultzi). These fish came from the same general area as maciliensis & haraldschultzi, too. It is my opinion that A. t. maciliensis & haraldschultzi are just ecological color morphs of the more widespread A. trifasciata. Until this is all settled by further scientific collection & examination, I suggest we don't use A. maciliensis.
 

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