mine is breeding and their color is just amazing .. they get black down half of the body. when do u pick ures up ?
BigCountry;3284432; said:I would hunt down a Escondido. Those are the best looking. If you can score 2, then you could possibly breed them. And that would be REALLY fun.
If you cannot locate any of those, shoot for a Carpintes. That is what I landed at the LFS luckily.
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VRWC;3287924;3287924 said:escondido is a carpintis...just a regional variant.
if you read this thread from the beginning, there are some posts explaining the difference between all these mis-named/mistakingly named fish.
The confusion stops when people stop calling a carpintis a green texas, a flowerhorn a red texas etc...there is only ONE Texas cichlid and its a cyanoguttatus, not carpintis. Lets start calling them correctly to stop the confusion.
escondido just has a few different markings on the face. not worth all the hype if you ask me. and i HATE the "texas" label. it causes so much damn confusing. you got true texas, false texas, blue texas, green texas, turquoise texas, aquamarine texas, texas texas and the list goes on. capefeartarheel;3154212; said:
True Texas arent worthless, especially in the Netherlands & Europe. They arent very common and I see more Escondidos in LFS than I do Texas. Actually, Ive never seen a common Texas in a LFS come to think of it. They are cool fish, lots of personality, borderline super aggressive & look VERY COOL in breeding dress.
"Texas Cichild" Herichthys cyanoguttatus
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Herichthys cyanoguttatus in breeding dress
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http://wrongcrowd.com/albums/aq-critters/green_texas_cichlid_fry1.jpg
I have seen 3 different variants of Herichthys Carpintis:
escondido - more turquoise in color, wormish looking marks around the mouth (like a green terror kind of)
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chariel - big roundish close together spots, more gold in color than the other 2
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lahillas more blue and black, smaller spots spread apart more, lower profiled than the other 2 variants
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The easiest way to tell the difference is the spots are different sized and the markings around the eyes and mouth are different, mainly with the carpintis and all 3 carpintis are locale differences and specific to their gathering locations (all of which are within 200 miles of each other I believe).
VRWC;3287924; said:escondido is a carpintis...just a regional variant of a carpintis.
if you read this thread from the beginning, there are some posts explaining the difference between all these mis-named/mistakingly named fish.
The confusion stops when people stop calling a carpintis a green texas, a flowerhorn a red texas etc...there is only ONE Texas cichlid and its a cyanoguttatus, not carpintis. Lets start calling them correctly to stop the confusion.
i think he said that because you made it seem like they were two different species by saying to look for an "escondido" and if you cant find one, just get a "carpintis". but the fact is that theyre the same species, just a different variant. just causes confusion to those that dont know about these fishBigCountry;3288026;3288026 said:Your point? I never denied or argued that. what else do you expect me to call them when referring to them? lol
BigCountry;3284432; said:I would hunt down a Escondido. Those are the best looking. If you can score 2, then you could possibly breed them. And that would be REALLY fun.
If you cannot locate any of those, shoot for a Carpintes. That is what I landed at the LFS luckily.
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BigCountry;3288051; said:Yeah but if I sold them at a LFS I sure as hell would not label/price them the same.