Thank you for that, except I don't know which fish you are referring to.
If the OP fish, then are you challenging the Tor douronensis ID of Antzzom Lee from YouTube?
If the small recent acquisition from Rapps, then are you challenging its ID as Tor douronensis?
Or both?
Please be clear and not so curt as to the point of confusing me. I am confused enough and the mahseer wretched state of taxonomy is not helping either...
Hi there Viktor, hope all is good. I am afraid
GiantFishKeeper101
may also be correct. I'll explain the 'also be' part soon. I finally took possession of my first monster of a mahseer. Two of them actually. I was getting more impatient with the ever extending border closing, so, I began actively searching for possible large Stracheyi blue mahseers locally. Interestingly, I was offered the same fish I've seen in pictures for sale but wasn't interested in then. The owner contacted me to ask if I would be interested to purchase his prized fishes due to financial issues, probably a victim of the global lockdown economic effect.
The 'also be correct' part here is that I have observed that the scale colouration, lateral line and almost everything are identical. The only exception are the body parts/features that tells Tor genus from Neolissochilus genus.
You can see from the picture their heads quite clearly says Tor. I have noted that they also have mental lobes, although not too visible and pronounced lips, other Tor features. This picture was taken at the seller's tank. Both fishes are sold as Mekong Tor mahseer and are now in a fiberglass quarantine tank in my house. I'll take more pictures once they are in my tank after the tank is done up and quarantine period is over.
Being sold as Mekong Tor, I was searching all over the internet for more information on habitat so I'd know better how to take care of them. I found nothing at all. As if this fish never existed whether in Mekong or any part of Thailand. I then asked anyone with any information at all to the real place or river of origin cuz I have checked and almost all literature says main body of river Mekong is probably devoid of mahseer. Only the tributaries has them and tributaries from Thailand to Mekong would unlikely have any Tor mahseer too.
For a few short days, I was living in my own delusional world when I had this theory where the only reason I cannot find any info is that these fishes are Tor Ater (the newly discovered and rare species), which seemed plausible as while there aren't any pictures of T. Ater, the descriptions checks out. Big (I am aware someone else in the country bought a 45 inch specimen), very dark colour to almost black, fins are very dark blue to almost black, short mental lobe, concave snout and Tor Ater also has a lateral line. It does look that way when it was first brought into the country.
I thought I have hit jackpot. It was short lived after common sense kicked in. Since it's almost impossible to find any information, why not just ask someone who knows a lot about these fishes in Thailand.
I did that and also at the same time found myself a really good deal for some nice blue Stracheyi mahseer. All I need to do now is either wait slightly longer and fly to Chiang Mai, where I believe the most gorgeous Stracheyi could be from or just trust the local trader there (whom btw is super friendly and if my deal works out
fugupuff
can also have an alternative option to purchase those amazing fish-porn standard Stracheyi).
Anyway, according to the local Chiang Mai trader, he confirms that there are indeed a Neo version and a Tor version of identical looking Thai blue Mahseer. These Neo and Tor versions are also found in river Mekong as well as river Salween where he is trading from. I know the local name for the Neo version is Pla Puang, and the nice gentleman then tells me the Tor version is called Pla Jao, but usually everyone just calls them pla puang out of convenience. But the Tor version is just the same as other Tors in that area as in they can grow huge and specimens above 5 feet isn't unheard of. While the Neo would struggle to get above 3 feet.
So, is your Thai blue/golden mahseer Douronensis, purely judging from the head, perhaps not, but now I know there is an identical Tor version that looks slim n mean that may be Douronensis and it can get seriously huge. And they are super duper powerful jumpers, I had to use so much weight to cover the quarantine tank, anymore, the tank itself will collapse. No one will be called silly to suspect a crocodile is actually inside the fully covered quarantine tank.
I'm not sure if this is news or they are old news and I'm making myself a fool here, but if I'm a fool, I am a happy one cuz I already fell in love with my latest purchase. Just can't wait to have them in the tank. And at the same time, respecting the reason why they are so powerful, I would work on a mega tank (my standards, not your standard,
thebiggerthebetter
.....8x8 footprint at least. Only God knows how many digits your version of mega tank is ? ) as soon as I sort out the financial mess the pandemic brought on to my business.
The pair in the quarantine tank, the best thing that happened to me during this health crisis.