Definitely Heros sp. rotkeil. This fish is claimed to be an undescribed species from Peru but some have questioned that because there is still no hard data showing where they occur in the wild. So the validity of whether it's naturally-occurring is still debatable.
There are five or six officially described species, depending on whether or not you agree with Kullander collapsing appendiculatus into efasciatus (I don't necessarily agree with that):
H. efasciatus
H. appendiculatus
H. notatus
H. severus
H. liberifer
H. spurius
There are also tons of regional variants. Some, like sp. rotkeil (if truly naturally-occurring) or sp. Inirida, probably warrant being officially described as their own species. Others may just be geographical variants with slightly different colors and patterns. For instance, there are Heros from Santarem, Manaus, Uatuma, Tapajos, Araguaia, Paraconi, Trombetas, Tocantins, etc. that all have their own physical appearance, but that doesn't necessarily constitute a whole new species.
And then of course there is the mess of Heros in the hobby, which are often farm-bred and could be any mix of things. Any of those Heros mentioned above could have been interbred for decades to come up with the mix of genetics we call "green severum" in the aquarium trade. You also have the xanthic/leucistic gold severums, derived from greens, and the super red spotted which are intensely-colored and supposedly line-bred from golds. Now it appears people are crossing the super reds with all sorts of stuff to come up with unusual looking hybrid fish. As I said, it's a mess.