I have seen festae called heros festae, cichlasoma festae, ex cichlasoma festae, and amphilophus festae. Are these all the same fish or are they different species? I see some referred to as "true" red terrors, what are false red terrors then?
they are both badass in their own rights.....i read that Mayans have been found 3 miles out in the ocean or some crazy stuff like that. Getting some for my Moray tank and converting everything to Brackish shortly. Mayans, Texas, JDs, Pearls, Blackbelts........couple of beers..............PAAAAAR-TEEEE!!!!So there is only one Red terror and one wannabe the mayan?
So there is only one Red terror and one wannabe the mayan?
Much of the reasoning for the new classifications is the advancement of DNA technology.
In the past, relationships were based of visible characteristics that suggested relationships, past and present. I know this is an oversimplification, but if a cichlid in the new world looked like an Amphilophus, scientists figured, there must be related.
But the new DNA technology has allowed us to pinpoint (to some degree) the evolutionary migrations and tract relationships to a greater degree, and many of these contradict characteristics like body shape, color, or other visible clues.
So although many aquarists think Mesoheros festae resembles wherever x uropthalmus ends up, it really doesn't.
Below is a link where much of the research can be found by aquarists
www.facebook.com/groups/854456601280181/
Also a word of caution about dropping uropthalmus in salt water.
I have seen the group in Isla de Mujeres that lives in sea water, they have evolved to live there over millenia, and may at some point be separated into a separate species.
So the idea that you could drop any fresh water variant into a salt water tank, may not be a great idea.
Mesoheros festae
fresh water uropthalmus on Riviera Maya, Yucatan, Mexico.
my Morays are in FW atm, I am getting ready to slowly .....very slowly graduate them to Brackish along w/ some other cichlids proven to live good or better in BrackishMuch of the reasoning for the new classifications is the advancement of DNA technology.
In the past, relationships were based of visible characteristics that suggested relationships, past and present. I know this is an oversimplification, but if a cichlid in the new world looked like an Amphilophus, scientists figured, there must be related.
But the new DNA technology has allowed us to pinpoint (to some degree) the evolutionary migrations and tract relationships to a greater degree, and many of these contradict characteristics like body shape, color, or other visible clues.
So although many aquarists think Mesoheros festae resembles wherever x uropthalmus ends up, it really doesn't.
Below is a link where much of the research can be found by aquarists
www.facebook.com/groups/854456601280181/
Also a word of caution about dropping uropthalmus in salt water.
I have seen the group in Isla de Mujeres that lives in sea water, they have evolved to live there over millenia, and may at some point be separated into a separate species.
So the idea that you could drop any fresh water variant into a salt water tank, may not be a great idea.
Mesoheros festae
fresh water uropthalmus on Riviera Maya, Yucatan, Mexico.