R Rubez Small Fish May 28, 2005 #1 May 25, 2005 25 0 0 37 Norfolk Island May 28, 2005 #1 R Rubez May 28, 2005 *GOLDFISH* It is only 2 months old Attachments fish.bmp 48.9 KB Views: 175
fishtankmaster5 Large Fish May 28, 2005 #2 Dec 11, 2004 346 0 16 37 Pompano Beach, FL Visit site May 28, 2005 #2 fishtankmaster5 May 28, 2005 that is a kenyi cichlid or a bumblebee cichlid
Miles44 Small Fish May 29, 2005 #3 May 14, 2005 20 0 0 Southern California May 29, 2005 #3 Miles44 May 29, 2005 It is a johannii type. Sp. is hard to tell.
C Cichlid-Man MFT Staff May 29, 2005 #4 Jul 9, 2003 8,866 14 38 38 Columbia, SC www.youtube.com May 29, 2005 #4 C Cichlid-Man May 29, 2005 Are you referring to Pseudotropheus species Miles? I would agree with Bumble bee Cichlid, or Pseudotropheus crabro.
Are you referring to Pseudotropheus species Miles? I would agree with Bumble bee Cichlid, or Pseudotropheus crabro.
R Rubez Small Fish May 30, 2005 #5 May 25, 2005 25 0 0 37 Norfolk Island May 30, 2005 #5 R Rubez May 30, 2005 One parents is believed to be an albino zebra
straitjacket Large Fish Jun 1, 2005 #6 Mar 21, 2004 495 2 0 Los Angeles, CA www.freewebs.com Jun 1, 2005 #6 straitjacket Jun 1, 2005 I would agree with the fish looking like a johannii type. The face doesn't look right for a crabro. Of course, if one of the parents is believed to be an "albino zebra" then the only safe assumption would be a hybrid.
I would agree with the fish looking like a johannii type. The face doesn't look right for a crabro. Of course, if one of the parents is believed to be an "albino zebra" then the only safe assumption would be a hybrid.