Thanks to GS for adding some common sense to this discussion. Just for the record I am not a hybrid hater, I have kept several hybrids over the years, including flowerhorn, and including a female KKP that I currently own.
That said, EVERYTHING that GS stated is a simple matter of fact. There is no argument, there is no debate, think what you want, but anyone that has been in this hobby for any amount of time knows that a BP is a BP, and flowerhorn, is a flowerhorn. BUT, when you start crossing species such as in this thread, all bets are off. All it takes is one ignorant person to pass on offspring from these fish as (whatever) and the result can be years of hobbyists unknowingly passing on mutt fish, as something as they are not.
I'm all for hybrids that are obvious hybrids, even to entry level hobbyists.
I'm 100% against passing off fry from breedings such as this.
In fact, I am 100% against anyone breeding the same species, but from different geological locations - which is another form of hybridization, and with it carries the potential for losing various traits found in one species, but not the other. Even within the same body of water species can and often do vary, genetically, as well as morphologically, due to different feeding strategies etc.
A classic example of what I am referring to.
https://www.monsterfishkeepers.com/...ellus-a-potential-case-of-f1-midevils.439705/
Anyone that actually takes the time to read that, and then factor in what GS was saying, should get where this is going. This isn't being an asshat, this is being a realist, from someone who has seen this exact thing F this hobby up to a point where if one can't trace provenance back to a collection location in the wild, then you really don't know what you have. For a serious hobbyist, that's a pretty big problem.
The problem with random hybridization of a random pair of non related species of fish is this as GS stated, some offspring will look "special" (maybe?) some will be genetic duds that should be culled, others will look exactly like one of the parent fish. It's that latter group that often times end up in circulation, only later in future breedings rearing their hybrid origins. A real piss off for anyone that thought they had spent 6-12 months growing out a pure (whatever), or worse, bred the fish for years before they realized that at least one of their breeder parents wasn't pure. I have seen this happen too, from a guy who knew what he was doing. Hundreds if not thousands of fry released to other hobbyists, all genetic mutts. It made him sick.
It's not that this can happen, it has happened, probably millions of times over the past 3 or 4 decades.
These types of hybrids should never be distributed.