It's a Neolissochilus sp. From Thai probably either variants of stracheyi or soroides
Thank you for that, except I don't know which fish you are referring to.It's a Neolissochilus sp. From Thai probably either variants of stracheyi or soroides
Both, in the 4500g & the smaller specimen. Tor have sharper snout, have higher scales on the dorsal fin, different body type (but yours too fat for it to be distinguishable). I'm a dealer of these mahseers, seen plenty of specimens that I'm starting to see the differences.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...
Sorry to see this one go.Out of the blue, pun intended, we lost our Tor khudree this morning, the one Wes transferred to us in Aug 2015. You can see why it is called a blue tail mahseer in the pics below. It's always been a food hog and this may be in part why it didn't last longer, albeit IDK for how long Wes had had it before. I can't imagine more than 5-10 years but likely less, a lot less. fugupuff ?
It lived in a 4500 gal for the first 3.5 years with us and in 25,000 gal for the last 1.5.
It arrived from California already large, at around 22" and added 5 more inches in 5 years with us to reach 27". It gained an obscene mass and girth and felt about 15-20 lbs when I held it. It was an indiscriminate eater sucking up everything in its path.
Thus, it has eaten a lot of low quality, cheap, mostly-wheat-bean-and-corn Zeigler pellets (I only switched to NLS a couple of months ago) and was badly overfed probably, as I have recently learned better with the help of RD. duanes and F fishdance . kendragon - what do you think cyprinid Sensei-san? That's an Indian fish, right, headbanger_jib Jibran?
If I look back now, I'd say it has not been its normal self for the last few months, feeding less and sometimes not coming to the feedings at all though I thought I was merely missing it... now I think I wasn't, it just wasn't there at the feedings. Other than that, nothing else looked wrong, it remained as beautiful, thick, sleek, and well-groomed and as ever.
I didn't cut it open as I used to do for almost every fish. Somehow found no motivation, it's messy and gruesome and I rarely learn much... Probably I should have anyway but with so many recent deaths, I guess it is getting to me a bit and I have given up on post mortem exam altogether... I am sure there'd be a lot of fat inside but who knows... Just buried it under our mango tree. Poured ammonia on it so the coyotes don't dig it up in the night, or vultures in the day...
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Thank you, Neil. Turns out I should have heeded more than just the advices on the quality but also on the quantity.Well Viktor he certainly didn't die from skinny disease! Sorry to see you lose a fish amigo. Is there by chance any schools near by you that would consider performing necropsies on any possible future fish as a learning tool for their students?
Thank you, Jib. Yes, this fish was an eating machine, unstoppable, unfillable.Sorry to see this one go.
The tor khudree do have a voracious appetite, and yes they're from india.
If I may continue, this is exactly what I'm trying to replicate in one of my next tank in progress. The star of the tank will be Thai blue mahseers (Neolissochilus Stracheyi). Oh, btw, I did some homework on observing the fishes that are on sale, asking anglers who are fly fishing for mahseer in Thailand) for their valuable inputs, I'm betting heavily that the nicest looking Stracheyi will be from North East Thailand at either the tributary rivers to Salween river or from Salween herself.Too bad we'll probably never be able to replicate such colors in captivity but they are indeed breathtaking