reef_shadow
New member
Is it a hybrid or just a variation in color? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzlAUCGed10
Especially since Clarions and queens are found in different oceans.
Bingo! That is just a dark variant of a queen. Whoever is trying to sell it as a clarion hybid should be :uzi:
Way to say what you think Chris![]()
That is what I was told by a wholesaler in LA and I had a brazilian queen(angel) and it was stunning but due to my stupidity I lost her.I don't believe its a variant/morph at all. Brazilian queens are just better colored IMO. Reason being behind this is only queens are there,no blues to hybridize with.
nasos have streamers........so why can't clarions?!
I don't believe its a variant/morph at all. Brazilian queens are just better colored IMO. Reason being behind this is only queens are there,no blues to hybridize with.
Ha, yeah let me pull my years of research and data out of my pocket. I can understand your frustration with the hybridization craze lately. Its getting old and annoying that everyone who hassle fish that doesn't look exactly like what its supposed to, its automatically a hybrid...BS! However the blues and queens situation is a little different. Queen are found from Brazil to Florida, generally they don't go much north then that. While blues can be found as north as Long Island sometimes(crazy!)
to Florida, but not much south then that can we agree on that? No blues in Brazil and no queens say past the Carolina's? The Townsend appears to be a hybrid of both the queen and blue,I know you'll disagree and say there's no proof, maybe You need to DNA test for yourself instead of just arguing it. The biggest question is some seem to have more features of the queen or blue, which suggests (not fact) that maybe in the ancestry of the fish, there was some hybridization, the fish isn't 50/50. So a queen from Brazil will have no blue ancestry and a different look then most (not all) queens in say the keys, Where hybridization occurs mort frequently. If you think the two don't create a hybrid, where do some of the blues get their crown, where do some queens get there more yellowish color from? Again this is all speculation gathered from my own research, mainly from fellow hobbyists because I to am curious of the color situation. Now I may not have DNA testing results to back this, but do you have DNA testing results to disapprove it? This site is all about everyone's opinions, knowledge and sharing. Anyone can take my opinions/knowledge with a grain of salt,I don't know nearly enough as I'd like, don't pretend to know it all, but I know enough to say clearly That is not a hybrid queen, especially with a clarion![]()
I wont say agree to disagree, we have quite a few things we agree on. I agree about "drifts" and its unfortunate that they occur. I wouldn't say there are zero blues in Brazil, but the population being so low it wouldn't have as great of an impact as in the keys.
Just out of curiosity, what is your take on the color differences for different regions? You said Brazil does have more of an orange queen, and can say due to the region,but why? What's the explanation? A good hypothesis (perhaps theory in your case) is what I mentioned. And research is the search for knowledge. The knowledge I have gained, whether it be wrong or right, fact or fiction, is mainly from other hobbyists, this site,searching the internet (that can be pretty accurate as we all know) and speaking to the divers/collectors that I know in that region who are up close with these fish everyday. I have zero experience in the field, never seen a queen in the wild. I've be planning a trip to do so,but the oil spill will unfortunately alter my plans. I'd also love to collect actual data and facts on the situation and come up with an accurate result, but unfortunately that wont pay my bills. I'd love to hear your thoughts on the different regions colorations and why, since you do have quite the extensive knowledge in this hobby, I'd trust your opinion more then the average enthusiast.