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flatfish

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  1. !drool: Cactus plecs are definitely on my wanted list when we get a big tank...

    If it still counts... I have a poor collection, but have the 5 female rios (ugh), various BNs, 1 royal whiptail male (lost my other about a week ago), 4-5 sterbai cory (same random deaths as the whiptail), 3 red whiptails (2 female, 1 male), 5 hoplos, 8+ peppered cories, a banjo cat and 7 hara cats :nilly:

    That's a nice selection of catfish with several cool species. Shame about getting 5 female rios and not a single male.

  2. Hi David,

    the Panaque revision is a really nice paper and once you see pics of a goldline royal (Panaque armbrusteri) its pretty obvious we dont get them here - well at least I haven't seen one here. They are stunning. My big female I used to have wa ssold as a goldline royal but clearly wasn't.

    yeah my point on the other form was just to highlight there may be a little going on with royals, i.e. possibly other unrecognised species or forms. Some royals we have here get more of a spotted pattern on their back half when they are large but it doesn't cover the whole body.

    I agree completely that while we have some L190s that are nicer than others, I haven't seen any confirmed specimens of L27 here in NZ. As I said to Cam the other day while discussing a wholesaler who is currently offering L191 as L27, L27 turning up in a shipment of L190 would be like finding a genuine Rolex at a fake watch stall...

    I agree. A true goldline royal would cost a fair bit more than a L191

  3. I used to have a L114 i loved him, i have been thinking about getting some, but they can be quite agro so do you think i could get away with 3 in a 600l plus a few other plecos

    Three should be fine in your tank, even as adults, but provide plenty of hiding places and line of sight barriers, particularly when they start getting big. The males will grow to over 20cm but the females seem to stay a little smaller (mine are just under 20 cm). If you grow them up together that will help. I introduced a large male a while ago and there were several scraps but they settled down.

  4. They are a few other big pleco options if you are put of by the mess. If you after a cool but stroppy pleco for your tank then leopard cactus plecos (L114) are another cool option (my avatar is one of my adult females). They are largely carnivorous so they do well on a high protein diet but they do eat a fair few algal wafers as well. However they do have a bit of an atitude. Anyway small ones are on the importers lists at the moment.

    If you want a largely vegetarian option with less mess then you could go for a gold nugget or a green or gold phantom. And there is also nothing wrong with a large redspot or goldspot pleco in a tank that size. However all big plecos eat a lot and produce a fair bit of waste.

  5. very nice royals and I agree the two types do look quite different. My female that I used to have looked like the second type. I would imagine that different waterways have slightly different forms and the two types may be from different regions. Have you seen the Lujan et al's Panaque revision paper? It talks a little bit about colour variation in Panaque nigrolineatus, including a slightly different colour morph from the upper Guaviare River in Colombia.

    Individuals from the upper Guaviare River in Colombia with coloration shifting from stripes as juveniles to irregularly shaped light brown to

    gray spots on dark brown to black base color as adults. This color morph is common in the ornamental fish trade .....

  6. Call me old fashioned but I also prefer to thumb through a paper copy. I've been getting a paper copy since the first issue. Its a fantastic magazine and a great read. Its also nice to see what available overseas such as all the colourful freshwater shrimps, different bettas, weird cichlids, cool plecos, .......

  7. Nice fish and a good price. Its a Hypancistrus: either a chocolate zebra (L270) or a Columbian zebra (Hypancistrus debilittera, L129). I would say its a L270 but Geoff is better at telling these two apart.

  8. I'm surprised it could handle 20 degrees and do well but in my opinion its not a particularly kind thing to do over winter. I would suggest moving it back to your warmer water tank, at least over winter.

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