Wow that's actually really cool. Anymore pics?I'm gonna spamHendre thread with the Designer Gucci version. Bam here it is!
View attachment 1280456
Wow that's actually really cool. Anymore pics?I'm gonna spamHendre thread with the Designer Gucci version. Bam here it is!
View attachment 1280456
As stated earlier, P. Senegalus is established over vast distances in Africa, and likely has been for thousands of years. As it is quite impossible for the entire P. Senegalus population to interact with each other, you end up with separate colonies, or populations if you will, that evolve independently of each other. This is perhaps the most common way in which evolution produce new species. In short, simple logic tells us that there must be several subspecies of P. Senegalus.
P. senegalus is p. Senegalus regardless of where its caught. Endlicheri "black volta" is not a different species from endlicheri "faranah"
Ops question wether his wc senegalus is different from his cb.... of course as all of our cb are different from wc.
His wc sen is not a different subspecies....what hes seeing is a difference between a wc fish and a cb fish. Same can be found in wc cichlids bs cb
Lol do you remember the list king-el put together on FB showing all the catch locations. Can you post it here.* Mic Drop......
Really? Again if the genetic differences are great enough, then they must be considered seperate species, or at least subspecies under one umbrella genus.P. senegalus is p. Senegalus regardless of where its caught. Endlicheri "black volta" is not a different species from endlicheri "faranah"
Really? Again if the genetic differences are great enough, then they must be considered seperate species, or at least subspecies under one umbrella genus.
Also, Endlicheri "black volta" and "faranah" might well be considered subspecies of P. Endlicheri, again so long as the genetic differences are sufficiently great. Just because some scientist hasn't gotten around to scrutinize the taxonomy any further, doesn't mean that they're not genetically distinct from each other. Same applies to P. Senegalus. Naturally, captive bred variants can not be considered true species, I don't know if that's the case with either "faranah" or "black volta".
Ive read many books on the hobby....have you read any one polypterus ? I think not and even if you have you's see that the most common book is outdated and allot of the info has been revised.Read a book man.