Betta Tail Types, A Basic Guide - Female Pics Added |
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Betta Tail Types, A Basic Guide - Female Pics Added |
Dec 22 2004, 11:34 PM
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#41
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Leader of the Fishes Group: Banned Posts: 1689 Joined: 22-December 04 Member No.: 10727 |
This male is 32 rays and it is an over halfmoon royal blue male.
Yes. both belongs to me.
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Dec 24 2004, 06:30 PM
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#42
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![]() Fish Addict Group: Member Posts: 654 Joined: 2-May 04 Member No.: 5877 |
i thought i might extend on the "comb tail" part. comb tail is actually not a tail type. you hear people calling bettas HMGeno and HMTraited. in truth what the comb tail is, is that it is a extended CT line. meaning somewhere in the fish forefathers/mothers there was a CT and now he/she now carries the CTGeno. just a little clarification.
Something else, its very hard, but possible, to have more than one tail type on the betta. i dont have any pictures of a good example, but i have seen on multiple occasions where there is a DT HM, he/she basically fills the imaginary circle perfect. you can also have CT HM, but this is hard to acheive also. Thai breeders have plakad CTs and HMs. sorry if i confused anyone. |
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Dec 25 2004, 06:20 PM
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#43
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![]() Fishaholic Group: Member Posts: 468 Joined: 21-October 03 From: Australia!!!! (I wish) :( Member No.: 2610 |
pretty bettas!!!
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Dec 26 2004, 12:56 AM
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#44
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![]() Big fish Group: Members Posts: 3935 Joined: 16-November 03 From: Anchorage Alaska Member No.: 2908 |
CCNM you Cant be plakat plus anything, plakat is the absence of any genetic variation, and its quite imposible to have something and not have it at the same time (well it happens with relationships but thats a whole different story). Also DT and HM are the same thing to different degrees so you cant do it there too, and Crown Tail Comb tail is the same story, Ive seen a DoubleTCT before but they are labled DoubleTCT's them and HMCT's are just aboput the only doubles traits you see.
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Dec 26 2004, 01:38 AM
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#45
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![]() Fish Addict Group: Member Posts: 654 Joined: 2-May 04 Member No.: 5877 |
yes you can have a two tail type plakad. plakad is a term for short fins. its just like long finned. but the fact that plakads can have CTs and HM traits, even DT means that they can. plakad is not really a tail type, more of a classification IMO
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Dec 26 2004, 05:02 AM
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#46
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![]() Big fish Group: Members Posts: 3935 Joined: 16-November 03 From: Anchorage Alaska Member No.: 2908 |
I've never seen or heard plakad in reference to a CT or an HM (especially seing as how HM's are long finned) if its a CT its called a CT.
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Dec 26 2004, 06:46 PM
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#47
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![]() Fish Addict Group: Member Posts: 654 Joined: 2-May 04 Member No.: 5877 |
so your saying a plakat cant have a 180 span or Crowns?
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Dec 26 2004, 07:20 PM
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#48
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![]() Mwahahahahaha Group: Members Posts: 2999 Joined: 6-February 04 From: Chi-Town! Member No.: 3878 |
Half-Moon plakat!
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Dec 26 2004, 07:42 PM
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#49
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![]() Big fish Group: Members Posts: 3935 Joined: 16-November 03 From: Anchorage Alaska Member No.: 2908 |
My contention is that the fish joker posted would be called a Half Moon by convention rather than a plakat HM
EDIT: Mistyped plakat rather than Half Moon This post has been edited by Opcn: Dec 26 2004, 09:17 PM |
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Dec 26 2004, 08:21 PM
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#50
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![]() why does nothing ever turn out like it should? Group: Moderators Posts: 11846 Joined: 19-February 03 From: Ft.Worth TX Member No.: 637 |
Wow,opcn since when are you even interested in such things |
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Dec 26 2004, 09:08 PM
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#51
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![]() Fish Addict Group: Member Posts: 654 Joined: 2-May 04 Member No.: 5877 |
sorry to argue the point opcn.
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Dec 26 2004, 09:23 PM
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#52
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![]() Big fish Group: Members Posts: 3935 Joined: 16-November 03 From: Anchorage Alaska Member No.: 2908 |
CCNM, I didnt know that this qualified as an argument, But so long as a subject is unclear its best that we illuminate it isn't it
Wuv, I meant to say HM as apose to plakat, I see several places that a plakat is definid as a wild type tail, and since HM is not wild type I would think that it wouldn't qualify as plakat, Is there a flaw in that logic? |
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Dec 26 2004, 09:48 PM
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#53
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![]() why does nothing ever turn out like it should? Group: Moderators Posts: 11846 Joined: 19-February 03 From: Ft.Worth TX Member No.: 637 |
Yes. Originally they were 'wild types' but they've since been evolved to carry the colors and tail forms of the more common splendens.A 180 degree spread in a plakat is a HM PK. The term 'wild type' only implies that they're closer to their wild caught relatives than any other betta.
I see what you're saying though. I've argued the point revolving around CT PK's...isn't that just a crown with shorter finnage. But,apparently not. One thing to always keep in mind about bettas is that they're ever changing. Nothing's set in stone (including the IBC standards |
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Dec 27 2004, 07:33 PM
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#54
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![]() Fish Addict Group: Member Posts: 654 Joined: 2-May 04 Member No.: 5877 |
i dont know if we should classify plakad as a tail type. before all tail types could someone edit in the diffrences between Long tailed bettas and plakad bettas?
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Jan 9 2005, 10:19 PM
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#55
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My names Russell.... ....and I'm a Plecoholic Group: Members Posts: 5916 Joined: 14-April 04 From: Milton Keynes - UK Member No.: 5413 |
I'm now thinking the same thing.... The worring bit is i now have 2 of the'females' in the same tank (15gal) I might have to go and get some better pics for a good ID. [edit] Anyone fancy helping me out, click here... This post has been edited by smithrc: Jan 9 2005, 11:07 PM |
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Jan 19 2005, 05:00 AM
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#56
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Leader of the Fishes Group: Banned Posts: 1559 Joined: 16-November 04 Member No.: 10291 |
can that thing even swim? Tha tail si huge |
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Jan 20 2005, 02:57 AM
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#57
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Some days even my lucky rocketship underpants won't help Group: Members Posts: 2255 Joined: 20-November 04 From: Birmingham, AL Member No.: 10337 |
Maybe we need 2 stickies...
1 for regular Betta tail types...and 1 for Plakat tail types lol cas I was under the impression a Plakat was a type of betta..not a type of tail |
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Jan 20 2005, 07:06 PM
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#58
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Dog Wrangler Group: Members Posts: 2178 Joined: 6-February 04 Member No.: 3863 |
A plakat is a Betta splendens, just like any long finned betta is. So they're the same. But plakats males are always distinguished by their short tails. Plakats can be double tails or single tails. Those two types may also display crowntail or halfmoon. Dr. Lucas' current thinking on the matter is that half moon is NOT a gene (therefore you should never assume a fish labeled "HMx" actually carries a set gene), and that it is likely that crowning is only partially genetic, whether long fin or short fin Here's a portion of one of the good doctor's articles on the subject: Are There Half Moon Or Crown Tail Genes? In my opinion the answer is no! Both traits exhibit continuous variation. Both also turn up in relatively small numbers in spawns. Both seem to nearly disappear in F1 hybridization with strains that do not 'carry' the traits. True breeding strains of either do not, to my knowledge, exist. They certainly are not traits that are inherited through the single gene, dominant-partial dominant-recessive (Mendelian) mode. They also don't really conform to the multiple factor or multigenic mode although that might come closer. So how can they be explained? I believe these variants represent an extreme of some part of the normal range of variation of whichever genetic type they are. Another way to put it is that all the fish from a spawn are basically the same genetically and they only vary within the scope of possibility for their type. There doesn't need to be mutant genes for Half Moon or Crown Tail to provide for the types. I believe breeders have seen something desirable about these respective tail shapes and tried to, by selection, breed to enhance them. To some degree they have succeeded. Selection can and does guide the development of types but the range of possibility is quite different from what it becomes if there is a new genetic mutation. Attempts to 'fix' a type that only emerges after persistent selection are likely to be frustrated by the number of generations required and the slow progress toward the goal. In the case of these two Betta types it is clear that the types have been refined and there are strains that produce the ideal, but we still don't have strains that breed true, meaning that matings can be made that will produce all of that type. Although I haven't worked extensively with either Half Moon or Fringe Fin (Crown Tail) Bettas, I have worked with them and I have a considerable amount of anecdotal information about them from others who have. I believe that anyone who knows will agree that good specimens of Half Moon occur in low percentages in even the best strains. I am talking about numbers like five percent. The rest of the fish in the spawns do not have full half circle caudal fin anatomy. Even if you breed from the best you can get, you are likely to get a low percentage of good ones. If you breed from lesser quality individuals, even though they come from the same spawn, you can expect to get proportionately lower numbers of good ones ... if any at all. While there may be an ideal type for Crown Tails in Indonesia, where most of the best developed ones seem to be coming from, it isn't clear to breeders in this part of the world what that may be. I think strains are a bit farther along than Half Moons in the sense that a higher percentage of individuals with some form of ray projection appear in spawns but this might be a function of how strictly the type is defined. It could well be that the number of fringed finned individuals might only contain a small percentage which would be considered true or ideal Crown Tail and the rest inferior. A lot like those 170 degree or 160 degree less-than-Half Moons. In the spawns I have, that I got when I crossed Crown Tails with Bettas that have smooth edged fins, none of the progeny show anything more than a very faint suggestion of ray extension. If you weren't specifically looking for them you wouldn't recognize anything different about them at all. So, What's This All About, Anyhow? The main concern I have is that we are dispensing information that is incorrect or at least that has thus far not been proven. I hear people routinely refer to fish that are 'Half Moon geno,' for example, since what they refer to are fish that come from lines that have produced Half Moon phenotypes. Use of the term 'geno' implies that these fish have a genotype (from which 'geno' has been contracted) or carry a gene that will produce more of them. Since there has been no demonstration of the existence of a mutated gene that is responsible for this trait, and breeding patterns cannot be carried out that could be if there were, it is inappropriate to use that kind of language when discussing them. From what I have been able to determine so far, I believe the same should be said for the Crown Tail trait, although I'll feel more confident after I am able to analyze more than F1 generation progeny. " From Midwest Betta Club This post has been edited by cation: Jan 20 2005, 07:16 PM |
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Jan 20 2005, 08:47 PM
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