Texas, Texas Blue, Carpintis???

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Wow, huge nuchal hump! Nice. :D
 
No such species as a red texas, those are hybrids :P
 
Could be that it hasn't peeled yet?
 
reverse;1051443; said:
Look at this one

100_0108.jpg

I have the same exact fish, But not sure what kind it is. Do you know?
 
fishaddict;1124986; said:
I have the same exact fish, But not sure what kind it is. Do you know?
its a flowerhorn. its a mix of a bunch of fish. people commonly mix texas' to them for the pearls in its pattern. they use texas cichlids to get those pearls on some hybrids. type in bonsai red texas in the search and click on neoprodigys i.d. thats another example of a fish that has texas in it to make the pattern nicer.
 
andyourblueblood;1127348; said:
its a flowerhorn. its a mix of a bunch of fish. people commonly mix texas' to them for the pearls in its pattern. they use texas cichlids to get those pearls on some hybrids. type in bonsai red texas in the search and click on neoprodigys i.d. thats another example of a fish that has texas in it to make the pattern nicer.

Not a flowerhorn I spawned this one myself it is a carpinte/texas cross
 
Chago09;1049224; said:
is there any way to determine the difference between the 3???

Yes :)In my opinion the best way is to call them by their names instead of what the general public decides to call them.

Texas is another one of the most confusing names to call any of them:) As any hobbiests next question is going to be "WHICH ONE" :(

So getting more aquainted with the "scientific names" Is an excellent idea :) It will also provide you with more complete and quality info during research.

This is strictly my opinion. :)
 
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