Peacock bass eye color & I.D.

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Dominator

Jack Dempsey
MFK Member
Nov 25, 2008
1,052
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Queens, New York
Hi guys, i went to an aquarium to search for peacock bass, luckily, there were 4 baby peacock bass just came in yesterday, said by the pet store employee. There were 2 white eyes and two red eyes; white eyes peacock looked pretty green and red eyes were dark gold body color, the guy didn't know what variety was it or the price for the fish, so i picked up one white and one red eye.
And can someone please ID these two fish?
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look ocell . bet the two that have white are just smaller havent got red yet.Could be hybrid pretty small though!
 
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HULON;3898249; said:
look ocell . bet the two that have white are just smaller havent got red yet.Could be hybrid pretty small though!
nope, same size, two are clear white, other two blood red.
i don't think there are that many hybrids up there.
 
Dominator;3898258; said:
nope, same size, two are clear white, other two blood red.
i don't think there are that many hybrids up there.
It will be interesting to see how these guys turn out.Where did you get them?I should ask did the pet store know were they came from?
 
HULON;3900942; said:
It will be interesting to see how these guys turn out.Where did you get them?I should ask did the pet store know were they came from?
petstore knows nothing, "all i know its called peacock bass", he said. the red eye is sooo goldish, the white eye/green body became silver.
 
everyone is going to tell you hybrid, mono, or ocell. but the true is no one will know until you grow them out a bit. A friend of mine put a ID thread up a while ago when we already knew the species was C. orinocensis and got just that "mono, ocell, or hybrid"

In six species juveniles possess three dark blotches on the side and a dark band connecting the posterior blotch
to the dark blotch at the caudal-fin base: Cichla ocellaris is known from the Guianas, including the Marowijne,
Suriname, Corantijn, Demerara, and Essequibo river drainages, and also the upper Rio Branco in Brazil. Cichla
orinocensis is known from the Negro and Orinoco river drainages in Brazil, Colombia, and Venezuela. Cichla
monoculus is widespread in the floodplains of the Amazon basin, in Colombia, Peru, and Brazil, and also collected
from rivers of Amapá in Brazil, and the lower Oyapock River on the border between Brazil and French
Guiana. Cichla nigromaculata is known from the upper Rio Orinoco in Venezuela and, tentatively, the middle Rio
Negro in Brazil. Cichla kelberi, new species, is restricted to the Tocantins river basin, but also found transplanted
in the Paraná and Paraíba do Sul river drainages and reported from the Nordeste region of Brazil. Cichla pleiozona,
new species, occurs in the Madre de Dios, Beni, and Guaporé river drainages in Bolivia and Brazil, and in
the Rio Jamari in Brazil. A lectotype is fixed for Cychla toucounarai which is a synonym of Cichla monoculus.
Juveniles and young of the remaining nine species, in addition to the three midlateral blotches, possess a dark
horizontal band extending from the head to the dark blotch at the caudal-fin base: Cichla mirianae, new species,
is restricted to the upper Tapajós river drainage, in the Juruena and Teles Pires rivers, and the upper Xingu river
drainage in Brazil. Cichla melaniae, new species, is restricted to the lower Xingu river drainage in Brazil. Cichla
piquiti, new species, is restricted to the Tocantins river basin, but transplanted in the Paraná river basin in Brazil
and Paraguay. Cichla thyrorus, new species, occurs in the Rio Trombetas in Brazil, upstream from the Cachoeira
Porteira. Cichla jariina, new species, occurs in the Rio Jari in Brazil, where it is so far recorded only from the region
of the Santo Antonio rapids. Cichla pinima, new species, occurs in the lower parts of southern tributaries of the
Rio Amazonas in Brazil (Tapajós, Curuá-Una, Xingu), and the lower Tocantins and Capim rivers. Tentatively
identified specimens are recorded from the Amapá, Araguari, and Canumã rivers in Brazil. Cichla pinima occurs
translocated in the Rio Paraguaçu in southeastern Brazil, and is reported as translocated from the northeast of
Brazil. Cichla vazzoleri, new species, occurs in the Uatumã and lower Trombetas rivers in Brazil. Cichla temensis is
known from the Negro and Orinoco river drainages in Brazil, Colombia, and Venezuela. It is also recorded from
blackwater rivers along the Rio Solimões-Amazonas in Brazil (Tefé, Rio Puraquequara, Rio Uatumã, and Silves).
Cichla intermedia is restricted to the Casiquiare and Orinoco river drainages in Venezuela.


work cited Sven O. Kullander and Efrem J. G. Ferreira
 
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