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Thread: ID Fishes

  1. #21
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    Aiya so complicated already.

    Hybrids are offsprings of two totally different species that resembles neither the mother or father whereas selective breeding offsprings have best traits of both the father and mother.

    Hope I am right on this.

  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by fisherw View Post
    Would the correct term be "variety" then? As a layman and using terms that are not entirely accurate, the term "hybrid" is often used for something that is different, as in a hybrid financial instrument.

    Are wild caughts more brilliant? I had noticed from photos of some wild specimens on AQ that they tend to be duller?

    I must admit I am less aware of what is selective bred and what is not and therefore do not or have not steered clear of buying them. Dyed fish however is lots more obvious. I see from the tag below your nick your stand on dyed fish.
    sorry what is your statement on variety refering to? A "variety" simply means something that is differing from the vast majority. so you will say the yellow flesh variety of watermelons, given that most watermelons have red flesh. in horticulture we call them cultivars.

    as a general rule wild fishes looks better in their habitat, probably because they eat their natural diet and are relaxed and "happy". some fishes acclimatise better and are fed better food or even colour enhancing flakes. also if you are looking at photos, sometimes they don't do the fish justice

    actually my sig says nothing about dyed fish. dyed fishes are not even a variety as they are not produced by breeding but simply by a physical process to the fishes themselves, not their offspring.

    Quote Originally Posted by Orion View Post
    whereas selective breeding offsprings have best traits of both the father and mother.
    only if the father and mother are from the same species.
    Last edited by Quixotic; 7th Oct 2008 at 01:22. Reason: Insert quote to avoid confusion
    why I don't do garden hybrids and aquarium strains: natural species is a history of Nature, while hybrids are just the whims of Man.
    hexazona ˇ crumenatum ˇ Galleria Botanica

  3. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by hwchoy View Post
    only if the father and mother are from the same species.
    of course. But if the same species have been through some gene alterations (like insertion of jelly fish gene) and their offsprings turned out to be totally different (mutation) ,can we called it a hybrid?

  4. #24
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    No, then we call it "genetically modified".

    Your concept is a bit messed up. Mutation is not related to genetic modification. It can have a mutation in a gene but not genetically modified.

    ck

    Quote Originally Posted by Orion View Post
    of course. But if the same species have been through some gene alterations (like insertion of jelly fish gene) and their offsprings turned out to be totally different (mutation) ,can we called it a hybrid?

  5. #25
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    I am laymen here so...

    the difference here is modified and mutated.

    so ... with mutation that occurs by itself in nature, that species will always stay 'wthin the range' of different strains and variants but will never be totally different. e.g red rose to yellow or orange rose and never to become lily etc. To be totally different takes very long, perhaps aeons to jump to another type and that required changes in genes in molecular level? Anything different will be a anomaly.

    genetically modified is totally changed in it's genes by artificial means eg lab that changed within a birth cycle.

    so if human give birth to a bear like child (e.g with bear paws among others) , we can't said it's a hybrid of man and bear but a anomaly.

    Can help explained in simpler terms as Internet I checked too cheem to understand.
    Last edited by Quixotic; 7th Oct 2008 at 01:23. Reason: Remove immediate quote

  6. #26
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    unfortunately I have to agree with CK your concepts are pretty "hybridized" but that's not a problem. we are all laymen the most important is the interest to learn and find out. think we should split this discussion, as soon as I get to a real cmputer!
    why I don't do garden hybrids and aquarium strains: natural species is a history of Nature, while hybrids are just the whims of Man.
    hexazona ˇ crumenatum ˇ Galleria Botanica

  7. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by Orion View Post
    so ... with mutation that occurs by itself in nature, that species will always stay 'wthin the range' of different strains and variants but will never be totally different. e.g red rose to yellow or orange rose and never to become lily etc. To be totally different takes very long, perhaps aeons to jump to another type and that required changes in genes in molecular level? Anything different will be a anomaly.
    ... Mutations can be induced by virus, environment, diet, bacteria, chemical, radiation, genetic etc. e.g. It is said that cancer is generally caused by accumulation of ~6 independent mutation events. But of course this will differ between individuals.
    To bring it back to the context of the long fin danio, the variety probably started from a mutation of the genes that regulate fin length, but the trait is subsequently enhanced by selective breeding since these traits are usually recessive. Another example of selective breeding is the goldfish.

    Quote Originally Posted by Orion View Post
    genetically modified is totally changed in it's genes by artificial means eg lab that changed within a birth cycle.
    so if human give birth to a bear like child (e.g with bear paws among others) , we can't said it's a hybrid of man and bear but a anomaly.
    Yes.

    Contrary to popular belief, it is not THAT easy to create a hybrid between 2 animals. The more distant they are, the more difficult.

    Also, it is not easy at all to genetically modify anything. The more complex the organism, the more difficult.

    Quote Originally Posted by Orion View Post
    Can help explained in simpler terms as Internet I checked too cheem to understand.
    At least you bothered to find out

    ck

  8. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by CK Yeo View Post
    Contrary to popular belief, it is not THAT easy to create a hybrid between 2 animals. The more distant they are, the more difficult.

    and that's why the Luo Hand and the Blood Parrot is such an abhorrence.
    why I don't do garden hybrids and aquarium strains: natural species is a history of Nature, while hybrids are just the whims of Man.
    hexazona ˇ crumenatum ˇ Galleria Botanica

  9. #29
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    Wow!

    Mr Yeo and Mr Choy has completely 'hybridized' my that brain cell information storage in this topic.

  10. #30
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    Great discussion! Mr Choy I still think that whatever its origin the platinum tetra is perhaps not H. rodwayi. The shop I worked in in the mid 1990s used to get imports of two different fish with the guanin deposits. One of these was golden in colour and had a very different body shape/colouration to the platinum which is more silvery-blue in colouration. The golden fish looked much more like the images of H. rodwayi I've seen in the literature and we used to receive it as H. rodwayi on the lists whereas the platinum was always just a "sp.". Just a hunch of course but interesting nevertheless.

  11. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by Matt Ford View Post
    Great discussion! Mr Choy I still think that whatever its origin the platinum tetra is perhaps not H. rodwayi. The shop I worked in in the mid 1990s used to get imports of two different fish with the guanin deposits. One of these was golden in colour and had a very different body shape/colouration to the platinum which is more silvery-blue in colouration. The golden fish looked much more like the images of H. rodwayi I've seen in the literature and we used to receive it as H. rodwayi on the lists whereas the platinum was always just a "sp.". Just a hunch of course but interesting nevertheless.
    actually mine is kind of green in color... but i guess i shall revisit the LFS and revert with its actual name... i got this from Biotope, a LFS in Singapore.
    Last edited by Quixotic; 7th Oct 2008 at 01:24. Reason: Formatting

  12. #32
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    Quote Originally Posted by Matt Ford View Post
    Great discussion! Mr Choy I still think that whatever its origin the platinum tetra is perhaps not H. rodwayi. The shop I worked in in the mid 1990s used to get imports of two different fish with the guanin deposits. One of these was golden in colour and had a very different body shape/colouration to the platinum which is more silvery-blue in colouration. The golden fish looked much more like the images of H. rodwayi I've seen in the literature and we used to receive it as H. rodwayi on the lists whereas the platinum was always just a "sp.". Just a hunch of course but interesting nevertheless.
    Matt, that's true the literature aren't too sure about the real identity of the "guaninised" fishes presumably no one is that interested since they aren't a separate species. I am basing this on what was said in the old Géry!

    and since it is parasitised, most characins presumably can be infected by this to some degree.
    why I don't do garden hybrids and aquarium strains: natural species is a history of Nature, while hybrids are just the whims of Man.
    hexazona ˇ crumenatum ˇ Galleria Botanica

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