Pretty sure the fish in the wild crossbreed and become a new species. Can't stop fish in the wild from cross breeding. Those are nice man made hybrid If done right IMO
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Not native to us but close enough
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i had tilapia for dinner.my fish house:
2.5g- ramshorn hatchery
6g eclipse- yellow shrimp, chili rasboras, yellow apple snails
29g- geo grow-out, angels, 12"fire eel, dwarf frog, apple snails
45g- jade sleeper gobies, native killifish, feeder endlers
75g- 2 oscars, parrot, silver dollars, albino channel cat, syno euptera, bichir, baby jaguar, convicts, yabby
125g- fahaka puffer, rainbow shark
and about a dozen bettas....
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Originally posted by elvispacman View Postthat was a tilapia? arent they you know white
discolor,ejagham,flava,fusiforme,guinasana,guineen sis,gutturosa,imbrifema,ismailiaensis,jallae,joka, kottae,louka,margaritacea,nigrans,mariae,
nyongana,rendalli,rheophila,ruweti,snyderae,sparrm anii,spongatroktis,tholloni,thysi,walteri,and zilli
All of these are tilapia,which one are you asking if it is white?I live for tangs@
Taunt,fishlines
I dream for smoking
reels@gianttanks.
I reminese the past
of walking the giant
fishmarket in jiju do.
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That wasn't a tilapia (which are from Africa and the Middle East) in the video - it looked like a South or Central American cichlid of some kind - something in Herichthys, Cichlasoma, or Uaru genus, probably.
I'm still unclear as to what an exotic species in a South Florida canal has to do with native fishes of the Houston area. Not even very close to us - three whole states and most of Florida between it and us.Last edited by Reefmonkey; 03-27-2013, 01:37 PM.
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