Did you know fantastic help is an anagram of Planet Catfish? This forum is for those of you with pictures of your catfish who are looking for help identifying them. There are many here to help and a firm ID is the first step towards keeping your catfish in the best conditions.
This pair was purchased as Hemiloricaria hasemani but I've got a tip that their real name is Hemiloricaria eigenmanni. This description fits well "Males grow short spines in the top of their heads and pectoral fins".
Can anyone tell me if they are hasemani or eigenmanni?
Unfortunately I do not know where they come from. We are the second owner of the fish, the first owner found them in a shop in Oslo, labeled with the name Loricada ;) Maybe it's not so easy to give them a proper ID when the origin is missing?
I would expect someone who knows this group better than me, for example Norman, to be able to ID them (or at least rule out a few!), but I was just trying to reduce the number of options.
Statistically, H. eigenmanni is definitely the most common...
I was under the impression the best way to ID Hemiloricaria spp. was by ventral scute patterns/counts, so a shot of its underside might help if you are still unsure.
Having said that, it looks very much like eigenmanni I have kept in the past (or what I believed to be that species).
Better late than never ... Here is a picture of the underside
The couple bred eight weeks ago and I would love to hear if you still think it's eigenmanni so I know what to call the new generation
This is a very interesting thread.
I purchased my Whiptails as Rineloricaria hasemani here on the west coast USA from Wet Spot. (Called Colombian Whiptails) They are selling them again and this time are calling them Hemiloricaria hasemani. The males I have, have facial whiskers on the sides of the face and nape of the neck, the eggs are green and roughly the size or slightly larger than a Corydoras egg. So the question becomes; how do I move the listing from Hemiloricaria hasemani in the Cat-eLog to H. eigenmanni? BTW- then what color are the H. hasemani eggs ?
Regards,
Don