I would agree with you Fugu that they are technically all 1 species and scientifically speaking they aren't considered 'hybrids' but more rather 'cross-breeds'.. One of my co-workers is always on my case about using the term hybrid, because that would more so refer to the blood parrot cichlid, not a crossbred ray..
so thats why we are more laid back than the cichlid nuts.... they are crossbred rays not hybrids
I would say there has to be atleast 3-4 or distinct species though.. I just don't see a Reticulata and Tiger ray producing viable offspring..
I think crossbreeding rays is great based on the fact that we can manipulate for size and pattern to best fit domestic aquaria's needs.. We can produce our own viable, high-dollar offspring without removing rarities from the wild. I also believe it to not be as detrimental as other fishkeeping 'cliques' that frown upon hybridization because the gestation period and maturity times make it a very long process in order to deplete the gene pool, unlike livebearers, cichlids, and other faster reproducing fish.
But as the Turkeyboy said.. Not having wild livestock will definitely damage the breeding genetics of 'pureblood' variations such as Leopoldi and Henlei.. and it won't take long either.
we all know there are always rays being smuggled and i think we will be fine in the pure blood area for awhile to come.... atleast in europe and the usa.... now asia is a different story
What's funny to think about is there are probably alot of 'pureblood' Leopoldi's floating around out there, exported from Brazil, that hybridized in the wild anid have mixed genetics even though they show 100% leopoldi patterns and traits.. How pissed would you be to spawn 2 pure wild-caught Leopoldi only to produce a Motoro offspring