Due to more up to date scientific data it has been reclassified several times. At the moment belonging to Mesoheros. Just four years ago when u got back in the hobby it was Cichlosoma.It's a 6 foot tank.
I do have a question on the scientific name.
The original response was that I had a Mesoheros Festae.
When I look stuff up online I see it referred to as two other names...
Cichlosoma Festae and Amphilophus Festae.
Are all three of these names the same fish?
Thanks to any moderator or experienced person who can explain this to me.


As in the case above, at first salvini ended up the catch-all new world genus Cichlasoma, then Nandopsis ( another catch all) but because Nandopsis was relegated to only those cichlids found on the caribbean islands (haitiensus, tetracanthus, and ramsdeni), a new genus had to be erected for salvini.Salvini cichlids were the same way. They have had 3 names: cichlasoma salvini Nandopsis salvini, and now Trichromis salvini.
I was wondering doesn't Trichromis mean "three colors" since that would make a lot of sense.As in the case above, at first salvini ended up the catch-all new world genus Cichlasoma, then Nandopsis ( another catch all) but because Nandopsis was relegated to only those cichlids found on the caribbean islands (haitiensus, tetracanthus, and ramsdeni), a new genus had to be erected for salvini.
Trichromis was available, and then assigned when DNA and other science decided it needed its own separate genus name.