Damsel hybrids!
Damsel hybrids!
Something very unexpected happened.The breeding pair was sharing the tank with a smalish C.parasema (see
http://www.marinebreeder.org/phpbb/viewtopic.php?f=171&t=3888 )
When the hemicyanea started to spawn,they began to attack the parasema,particularly the female hemicyanea.Until that time,they had lived together in peace.I was going to remove this third fish,but after some time,aggression became less and less frequent,so I let the three of them together.
After some time,I began to suspect that the female parasema was spawning with the hemicyanea pair in an unexpected interspecific trio.At first,I saw what looked like two separate nests close to each other.But now the two females are spawning in consecutive days.All eggs are fertile.
Interspecific hybrids of marine fish have been produced before under captive conditions,but always when the forced partners had no choice to mate with a conspecific.
What makes this event so unusual is that the hemicyanea male mated with a female of his species and also with another belonging to a different species!:eek1:
I imagine this could happen because the two species are in fact very next of kin,what is called sibling species,that don`t interbreed under natural conditions because they don`t coexist.Hemicyanea comes from the Indian Ocean,close to Indonesia and Australia,while parasema belongs to the west Pacific islands.
Besides their different colour pattern,they are very similar in shape and size.Meristics (gill rake and fin rays count) are identical for both species.