Mike, are you sure that top one isn't B. rostrata?mikev wrote:An attempt of a Barbel/Face comparison:
(Sorry for the bad photo, it is hard to catch the 2nd guy with barbels fully extended,..I'm still trying after about 200 shots... He will only extend them if there is food around, and that means a stampede) All I wanted to show is that the barbels are larger in this other type.
Another try
New Kubs + KUB/ROST/HIST/ALMORH Debate!
Moderator: LoachForumModerators
-
- Posts: 14252
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2005 12:41 pm
- Location: British Columbia
Your vantage point determines what you can see.
Mark,
How would I know? I had some suspicions for a while (this fish did have pretty ordinary juvenile Kub markings when I got it in spring of 2006). Now it does seem to me to be exactly halfway toward Rostrata in markings, but I never had Rostrata myself, so I cannot compare anything else. And did not Kottelat say that Rostrata is just a variant markings of Kubotai?
Behavior-wise, nothing special, but both Alpha and Beta pretty much hated it..
How would I know? I had some suspicions for a while (this fish did have pretty ordinary juvenile Kub markings when I got it in spring of 2006). Now it does seem to me to be exactly halfway toward Rostrata in markings, but I never had Rostrata myself, so I cannot compare anything else. And did not Kottelat say that Rostrata is just a variant markings of Kubotai?
Behavior-wise, nothing special, but both Alpha and Beta pretty much hated it..
-
- Posts: 14252
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2005 12:41 pm
- Location: British Columbia
I've always wondered if B. rostrata merits a separate species, but the markings on that one look to me like classic B. rostrata - the slightly variable double bands, and the general lack of "polka dots."
As we know so well here, rostrata, histrionica, almorhae, and kubotai can all be very hard to ID as immature fish, and they all share many characteristics.
And I'm not saying you're mistaken, just that going by the current taxa, that one looks a little like rostrata to me. I don't know if Martin or Emma want to weigh in on this...
Count yourself lucky - it's a very pretty fish.
As we know so well here, rostrata, histrionica, almorhae, and kubotai can all be very hard to ID as immature fish, and they all share many characteristics.
And I'm not saying you're mistaken, just that going by the current taxa, that one looks a little like rostrata to me. I don't know if Martin or Emma want to weigh in on this...
Count yourself lucky - it's a very pretty fish.
Your vantage point determines what you can see.
-
- Posts: 14252
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2005 12:41 pm
- Location: British Columbia
Thank you 
The fish started from a pretty ugly 1"..the only reason I have it at all is that I don't like leaving a single loach at a store, and the other two I wanted. It added more than an inch in fifteen months, so I guess in another year we'll know.
My opinion is worthless since I never saw a certified Rostrata...a word from Emma or Martin indeed would be helpful. But it is certainly not a Czech thing, I got it six months before Czech's came into the picture, and it is a Petland fish -- I've seen dozens of Kubs in Petlands and they are never funny-looking.
Incidentally, on similarities: I was thinking of getting Histrionica's on Saturday (this one never pops up around here), except that I could not believe they are:
. 100% a Juv Kub, I think, and this is btw exactly how the pseudo-Rostrata looked a year ago.

The fish started from a pretty ugly 1"..the only reason I have it at all is that I don't like leaving a single loach at a store, and the other two I wanted. It added more than an inch in fifteen months, so I guess in another year we'll know.
My opinion is worthless since I never saw a certified Rostrata...a word from Emma or Martin indeed would be helpful. But it is certainly not a Czech thing, I got it six months before Czech's came into the picture, and it is a Petland fish -- I've seen dozens of Kubs in Petlands and they are never funny-looking.
Incidentally, on similarities: I was thinking of getting Histrionica's on Saturday (this one never pops up around here), except that I could not believe they are:

Last edited by mikev on Mon Sep 17, 2007 6:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Whitey_MacLeod
- Posts: 291
- Joined: Thu May 17, 2007 12:27 am
- Location: Sheffield, England
Some lovely fish. Here's my three- they're probably about 2" or so now.



The way some of their smaller dots stretch into lines looks to me a little bit like a less extreme version of the patterning on mikev's oddball. It's not really possible for me to judge, as I've never seen a rostrata up close, but I can see a lot of kub in it.



The way some of their smaller dots stretch into lines looks to me a little bit like a less extreme version of the patterning on mikev's oddball. It's not really possible for me to judge, as I've never seen a rostrata up close, but I can see a lot of kub in it.
Fast and bulbous!
-
- Posts: 14252
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2005 12:41 pm
- Location: British Columbia
here's some close-ups of mine ill throw out there, my shark thinks its a kub 











-Jamie
--Various images
--Various images
Jamie,
My apologies for non-immediate reaction. These are great, and I'm particularly happy to see the "type3" one:

Interesting that just like mine its body narrows just after the dorsal and then widens again toward the tail, this is not the case with "type2". (Piggy4: my *feeling* this is the male attribute).
And one of your smaller ones again seems to be a pseudo-Rostrata: most of the horizontal line missing and I cannot see any small dots again.
If we watch them growing, eventually we should know what is the development stages and what are the true variations.
My apologies for non-immediate reaction. These are great, and I'm particularly happy to see the "type3" one:

Interesting that just like mine its body narrows just after the dorsal and then widens again toward the tail, this is not the case with "type2". (Piggy4: my *feeling* this is the male attribute).
And one of your smaller ones again seems to be a pseudo-Rostrata: most of the horizontal line missing and I cannot see any small dots again.
If we watch them growing, eventually we should know what is the development stages and what are the true variations.
i'm curious to know the sexes of my kubotai... so your thinking those body attributes that our type3's possess are males? we need to figure a way to distinguish the type2's
-Jamie
--Various images
--Various images
-
- Posts: 14252
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2005 12:41 pm
- Location: British Columbia
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 160 guests