Urogymnus dalyensis is not the same species.
According to every resource I've just checked, it is
~Thylo
Urogymnus dalyensis is not the same species.
According to every resource I've just checked, it is
~Thylo
Based on Fishbase (and Wikipedia but that one's not as trustworthy), dalyensis is a different species.
(Feel free to disregard this if there's more evidence on the contrary)
Oh no I meant U. dalyensis and H. dalyensis are the same species, in reference to the original question. I know australis is a different species.
~Thylo
Are there any Foosa in captivity?
Huh, I thought Urogymnus dalyensis was a former synonym for Himantura dalyensis. The Cairns Aquarium website confirms the ray they have is Urogymnus dalyensis.Urogymnus dalyensis is not the same species.
Huh, I thought Urogymnus dalyensis was a former synonym for Himantura dalyensis. The Cairns Aquarium website confirms the ray they have is Urogymnus dalyensis.
There doesn't appear to be that particular species of barracuda in captivity, though JAZA Database lists 5 other barracuda species, including great, in Japanese aquariums.
Personally I've seen at the Virginia Aquarium and a pet store in Skokie, IL.Apparently, they keep barracudas in the U.S too. I visited SEA LIFE Kansas City Aquarium back in August and one of the exhibits had a sign for a Great Barracuda. I didn't see it though, so I guess they removed it or it was off-exhibit. I did manage to get a picture of the sign though.
Great Barracuda is kept at quite a few US aquariums. Last year I saw a Northern Barracuda at the Maritime Aquarium as well.
~Thylo
Northern Barracuda was no longer at the Maritime Aquarium when I went in August.
Any Tasmanian giant crayfish in captivity?
Any Tasmanian giant crayfish in captivity?
Yes they are! I learned about them by watching a David Attenborough documentary on Tasmania.Sometimes you hear about an animal you've never heard of before and your imagination cannot prepare you for what it really looks like. Those things are HUGE!
~Thylo
Completely agree!Sometimes you hear about an animal you've never heard of before and your imagination cannot prepare you for what it really looks like. Those things are HUGE!
~Thylo
Of course there are, in Europe, Asia, North America, Australia and within Madagascar itself.