Modest_Man;2834208; said:Not a hybrid, not dyed. Certain populations of jacks in the wild have intense red like this.
Modest_Man;2834208; said:Not a hybrid, not dyed. Certain populations of jacks in the wild have intense red like this. It's just that most jacks in the hobby are inbred crap.
Very nice.
Modest_Man;2834312; said:Not an insult, simply the truth. Look around at photos of jacks. Most adults show signs of spinal deformities and quite a few have jaw deformities from being inbred for so many generations. I'd love to get my hands on some wild or F1 octos.
Go tell your jack I'm sorry I lowered its self-esteem. I'm sure he'll suck it up and get on with life.
I even have a "inbred crap" JD! LOLorbit;2834411; said:Actually I agree with this completely!
VRWC;2834357; said:Do you have pictures or info of any others this red? I have kept them for 25 yrs, my Grandfather for over 55 yrs and neither of us have ever seen a Dempsey with red. He even lived in Mexico in the 50s & 60s and caught them by the buttload (his words) in the wild living there and has never seen one with red. Is this a regional variant? If so, where are the red ones originally from?
VRWC;2834488; said:Cool, maybe you can help then. Where have you seen, read about or even seen pictures online of red JD's to agree with this?
Thanks!
Modest_Man;2834534; said:Laguna Ocotal in Mexico, classified as Rocio ocotal. Posted in the scientific journal Zootaxa by Juan Schmitter-Soto.
I'm not saying the fish posted here is this species, but one of the defining characteristics of these fish from Laguna Ocotal is the red belly.
