Who's getting the gem tang?

@copps,
had there been any attempt to document it again for scientific purpose?...truly least known angelfish...
is reunion island reef not diverse enough for study...pacific,being most pristine,get lots of undersea exploration...

Reunion is not some isolated place with no population... there are nearly one million people there and many divers... including good ones that know their stuff like Hughes Vitry... it is just almost never seen...

Actually, Copps, When Yuri and I went to meet Daniel Pelicier... I remember he told us, The Guezei Angel was high up on the list of fishes he would love to have caught. He tried several spots to find it in Mauritius and surrounding areas but in vain. According to him It's an Angel who'd be living way beyond the 100m mark, something I won't be surprised too.

Well Auem, Reunion island reef probably more or less have the same diversity of Mauritius, Just that Reunion island is slightly a younger island...... (They have larger Gem tangs less deeper too :P ):spin1:

Daniel is a great man... you guys are lucky to have met him... he's contributed so much to ichthyology and the hobby... and while he's dived deep, "deep" is a relative term, and there is a good possibility A. geuzei is at Mauritius deep... but there is also the possibility this species is similar to Centropyge debelius... when the holotype debelius (the holotype... not the first!) was caught at Mauritius by Rich Pyle and Helmut debelius it was not that deep... Rich went VERY deep on a number of dives expecting to find the population density there, but to no avail... so perhaps like debelius, A. guezei has its major population center in some undiscovered place... Species like A guezei though keep angelfish nuts like us so excited, as it makes us wonder still how many undiscovered Pomacanthids there are out there... :)

Copps
 
Does anyone remember who posted the thread in which he caught a juvenile ( I mean really tiny!) gemmatum tang in a tidal pool in South Africa?

Yurivd, was it you perhaps?

I'll try to find the thread myself . . .
 
Does anyone remember who posted the thread in which he caught a juvenile ( I mean really tiny!) gemmatum tang in a tidal pool in South Africa?

Yurivd, was it you perhaps?

I'll try to find the thread myself . . .

That was Bruce he lives in Port Elizabeth
I am 600km ( about 375 mile ) from the sea
 
Does anyone remember who posted the thread in which he caught a juvenile ( I mean really tiny!) gemmatum tang in a tidal pool in South Africa?

Yurivd, was it you perhaps?

I'll try to find the thread myself . . .
At the size he got, the little Gem tang had in all honesty very little chance of surviving.
Too small Gems are very prone to bacterial infection and some other diseases. I have had the bad luck myself :(
 
is there any gem tang collection there too...?:o

Naah, Reunion island is a French territory, so it's part of France.......!!
and according to French laws it's collection of marine animals for the hobby is strictly forbidden. But I know some nice reefers from Reunion island too. and They get some of the fish from Mauritius too.
 
Reunion is not some isolated place with no population... there are nearly one million people there and many divers... including good ones that know their stuff like Hughes Vitry... it is just almost never seen...



Daniel is a great man... you guys are lucky to have met him... he's contributed so much to ichthyology and the hobby... and while he's dived deep, "deep" is a relative term, and there is a good possibility A. geuzei is at Mauritius deep... but there is also the possibility this species is similar to Centropyge debelius... when the holotype debelius (the holotype... not the first!) was caught at Mauritius by Rich Pyle and Helmut debelius it was not that deep... Rich went VERY deep on a number of dives expecting to find the population density there, but to no avail... so perhaps like debelius, A. guezei has its major population center in some undiscovered place... Species like A guezei though keep angelfish nuts like us so excited, as it makes us wonder still how many undiscovered Pomacanthids there are out there... :)

Copps
why pomacanthids copp.?..there are 7-8 fishes in that group....centropyge has far bigger numbers...some of them are particular island specific and found in 100m+ depth...

but pomacanthus are found in reef and not deep dwellers(is there any such?)...centropyge seem to has much more chance to be hidden...:reading:
 
why pomacanthids copp.?..there are 7-8 fishes in that group....centropyge has far bigger numbers...some of them are particular island specific and found in 100m+ depth...

but pomacanthus are found in reef and not deep dwellers(is there any such?)...centropyge seem to has much more chance to be hidden...:reading:

Pomacanthids refers to the entire angelfish family Pomacanthidae... Pomacanthus , that you refer to, is a genus within the family Pomacanthidae.

I agree... the chances of finding another Pomacanthus (or Pygoplites of Holacanthus) are almost nil! The other four genera all have possibilities... :)

Copps
 
Not in my neck of woods (western Canada)

order from other side then :)

as copps said, its marketing, sell at the highest you can. my LFS just got 2 gem tangs on thursday, 2K each.

ships all over Canada too.

guess there is 1500 to be made if one decides to drive one down south lol
 
new on DD, a 2.5" Mauritius gem tang

0409121-280.jpg
 
she is pretty...amazing to see the prices some fish are fetching as of late...wish I could invest...
 
I think it's gorgeous. I bet it's even better in person.

How much for a frag? :lol2:
 
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