
Is there any kind of guide already, or could someone explain for me, how people identify what family an unidentified pleco is from by their mouth structure?
Thank you in advance, becky
Although I'm unaware of any guides, you might want to check in the list of Shane'sWorld articles. Maybe there's something there.MoonstruckRainbows wrote: 26 Apr 2022, 01:04 Thank you for your reply
Ive seen a few different mouth types when looking through various L nums, I hoped there may be some kind of guide or datasheet of type, diet, mouth features.
As there isn't, maybe it's something I could begin working on as I look through pics to learn myself, may be useful for others?
Shane wrote: 26 Apr 2022, 12:15It really would not make sense as things like oral disc shape and dentition are only single characteristics considered in identifying a loricariid genus or species.
- Shane
That's what I was thinking - mostly helpful only at the generic level, and even then not always since some genera have similar dentition.Acanthicus wrote: 26 Apr 2022, 16:47Hi,
there is no official key to identify a species by looking on a mouth/oral disk. It's all about experience, one day you will have that kind of a feeling that "a mouth" should belong to "a species" or at least a genus. The genus is easy, but the species requires hundreds of hundreds mouths to look at first. It is fun though, and as said above, it is a great reward for yourself.
You said it well, aquaholic. I think the benefit of the exercise is that it forces whomever attempts this to take a deep-dive of learning into loricariid mouths, and even if they don't end up with a report that is universally applicable across the family, they will have learned A LOT! and in that way they've become so much more knowledgeable about loricariids.aquaholic wrote: 26 Apr 2022, 15:31It's quite common and very human to formulate a classification system based on ones own unique needs. Different use creates different perspectives and priorities.
Go for it. Even if it only helps yourself, that's reward enough.