Crimson loach species, one or the same?
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- Emma Turner
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Crimson loach species, one or the same?
This might be one that The.Dark.One will want to look at. Two very similar looking loaches, which may even be the same species, imported on the same week, under two separate names. One was imported as Crimson loach - Schistura sp. 'crimson', the other as Scarlet loach - Nemacheilus nilgiriensis. They look identical to me, but their vastly different behaviur makes me question this. The ones imported under Schistura sp. 'crimson' have created nothing short of a blood bath in their tank, yet in the same conditions, a few tanks away, the ones imported as Nemacheilus nilgiriensis have been completely peaceful. In both cases, there have been good sized groups, and they have had the same amount of space, decor, foods etc. When I went to catch out some specimens of each to put into my photo tank, I had great difficulty in finding any S. sp. 'crimson' that was not damaged in some way. Most have big chunks or rips in the dorsal fins (this is males and females). Yet there is honestly not a single bite mark on the ones imported as N. nilgiriensis.
Here are some pics, the colours have faded a little upon being put in the photo tank.....
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - male
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - male
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - male (this one had the best dorsal, but is clearly damaged)
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - male
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - female
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - female
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - female
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - female
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - female
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - female
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - female
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - female
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - female
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - female
Just to clarify, this behaviour difference is not imaginary. Both batches of fish have been in at the shop for over 2 months, and I often observe them after hours. Can they really be the same? Could they be different populations of the same species, but evolved with a different aggression level?
Emma
Here are some pics, the colours have faded a little upon being put in the photo tank.....
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - male
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - male
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - male (this one had the best dorsal, but is clearly damaged)
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - male
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - female
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - female
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - female
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - female
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - female
Schistura sp. 'crimson' - female
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - male
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - female
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - female
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - female
Nemacheilus nilgiriensis - female
Just to clarify, this behaviour difference is not imaginary. Both batches of fish have been in at the shop for over 2 months, and I often observe them after hours. Can they really be the same? Could they be different populations of the same species, but evolved with a different aggression level?
Emma
East of the Sun, West of the Moon.
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Em, i remember a thread that Beta had on petfrd, where he was up in the hills in india, he shown a loach that i would have sworn was a crimson, and was told that there are quite a few look-alikes to them.
mick
ps, the posterior bars on t'other one are far broader than the crimson's.
mick
ps, the posterior bars on t'other one are far broader than the crimson's.
never take people at face value.
- bslindgren
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- helen nightingale
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Em, do you know much about the range/location of these two "species"?
i have been reading about ring species.
imagine a horseshoe shape. species 1 lives at one end, and species 2 live at the other end. they dont interbreed, and behave or look like separate species. but in the middle of the horseshoe, they do interbreed and would appear to be one species. (herring gulls are like this, and some salamanders).
i am too tired to look for the subtle differences the others have noticed
i have been reading about ring species.
imagine a horseshoe shape. species 1 lives at one end, and species 2 live at the other end. they dont interbreed, and behave or look like separate species. but in the middle of the horseshoe, they do interbreed and would appear to be one species. (herring gulls are like this, and some salamanders).
i am too tired to look for the subtle differences the others have noticed
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=anwy2MPT ... 1&index=11 spam spam spam
AFAIK, Shistura sp. Crimson are from Kerala and also Nemacheilus nilgiriensis (maybe also Tamil Nadu). Yesterday when searching around on the net found that Nemacheilus nilgiriensis are also found in mid-northern part of Karnataka in river Sharavati. According to the content at least 250-300kms north of previous known location.
http://ces.iisc.ernet.in/envis/sdev/sus ... /index.htm
As per my knowledge, these two places are quite far with no linkage of water bodies. Dont know about rivers of Kerala, but Sharavati flows west and is one of the few rivers that join the arabian sea (most major rivers flow east).
PS:
offtopic: One of the well known places about this river-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jog_Falls
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Jog_Falls
http://ces.iisc.ernet.in/envis/sdev/sus ... /index.htm
As per my knowledge, these two places are quite far with no linkage of water bodies. Dont know about rivers of Kerala, but Sharavati flows west and is one of the few rivers that join the arabian sea (most major rivers flow east).
PS:
offtopic: One of the well known places about this river-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jog_Falls
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Jog_Falls
--------------
Regards,
Deepak
Regards,
Deepak
- Graeme Robson
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- The.Dark.One
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- Joined: Sat Nov 11, 2006 4:56 pm
- Location: Castleford, England
Emma
These to me appear to be the same species as each other. Although they may show different behaviour I don't think this alone is enough for differentiating them, when in all other useable morphological factors they appear to be the same fish. However, I do think that both of these are closer to S. nilgiriensis. I do not think they are the same Crimson as first came in: http://forums.loaches.com/viewtopic.php ... ht=crimson
These new ones appear to have more complete bands, different head shape, and appear to have a shorter lateral line, which would tie them in with S. nilgiriensis.
These to me appear to be the same species as each other. Although they may show different behaviour I don't think this alone is enough for differentiating them, when in all other useable morphological factors they appear to be the same fish. However, I do think that both of these are closer to S. nilgiriensis. I do not think they are the same Crimson as first came in: http://forums.loaches.com/viewtopic.php ... ht=crimson
These new ones appear to have more complete bands, different head shape, and appear to have a shorter lateral line, which would tie them in with S. nilgiriensis.
Lord Foul The Despiser, Lord of the Flies, Lucifer, Beelzebub, Mephistopheles, Satan, Iblis, Samael, The Dark Lord, The Abhorred, Azazel, Anubis, Pluto, Hades, etc
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- The.Dark.One
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- Joined: Sat Nov 11, 2006 4:56 pm
- Location: Castleford, England
Nice pic n fish Mick.
They are very similar but I think they are different. Mick's fish and the ones in Emma's old thread look different to me to the ones in this thread. The colours and slight differences in pattern could be down to regional variation or diet but the lateral line does look different (although it is hard to tell).
They are very similar but I think they are different. Mick's fish and the ones in Emma's old thread look different to me to the ones in this thread. The colours and slight differences in pattern could be down to regional variation or diet but the lateral line does look different (although it is hard to tell).
Lord Foul The Despiser, Lord of the Flies, Lucifer, Beelzebub, Mephistopheles, Satan, Iblis, Samael, The Dark Lord, The Abhorred, Azazel, Anubis, Pluto, Hades, etc
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