Houston Zoo Going to Houston Zoo's Galapagos Islands

I tried looking into this the other day and from what I could gather, the ones in the private trade are a different species from the Galapagos species.

No, they are still Grapsus grapsus. The species can be found outside of the Galapagos and therefore is not an endemic Galapagos species.
 
No, they are still Grapsus grapsus. The species can be found outside of the Galapagos and therefore is not an endemic Galapagos species.
Both Grapsus grapsus and Percnon gibbesi are available in the trade and both are sold as "Sally Lightfoot Crabs" - but the most common one is Percnon gibbesi which is probably what @TinoPup would have come across when looking them up on the internet.
 
Both Grapsus grapsus and Percnon gibbesi are available in the trade and both are sold as "Sally Lightfoot Crabs" - but the most common one is Percnon gibbesi which is probably what @TinoPup would have come across when looking them up on the internet.

Yes, this is what I was able to gather from my trying to learn. The additional info in here has been helpful!
 
Yes, this is what I was able to gather from my trying to learn. The additional info in here has been helpful!
Indeed. Both species are native to the Galapagos but also outside of the Galapagos on the coasts of the Americas. Grapsus is semi-terrestrial (this is the iconic Galapagos Sally Lightfoot Crab) while Percnon is primarily aquatic. The latter is common in the trade and has become invasive in several parts of the world.
 
Indeed. Both species are native to the Galapagos but also outside of the Galapagos on the coasts of the Americas. Grapsus is semi-terrestrial (this is the iconic Galapagos Sally Lightfoot Crab) while Percnon is primarily aquatic. The latter is common in the trade and has become invasive in several parts of the world.

Thank you :)
 
Both Grapsus grapsus and Percnon gibbesi are available in the trade and both are sold as "Sally Lightfoot Crabs" - but the most common one is Percnon gibbesi which is probably what @TinoPup would have come across when looking them up on the internet.

There tends to be a lot of confusion in the aquarium hobby over the usage of "Sally Lightfoot Crab," as the flashy orange Grapsus seen in nature documentaries tends to be the initial thought, when in reality almost all crabs in the trade are in fact the much duller Percnon. Off the top of my head I don't think I've seen a legitimate Grapsus grapsus offered for sale, though I see Percnon regularly enough.
Interestingly the signage for the exhibit lists both, and both crabs photographed seem to indeed be a species of Grapsus.
 
Also, I feel like we've all accepted Amur Leopards in place for African leopards, but I can tell them apart more than I could with any of the other Galapagos stand-ins.
If you can tell leopard subspecies apart more easily than different penguin species or different iguana genera, then that would only be due to personal experience level rather than actual similarity of the taxa.
 
If you can tell leopard subspecies apart more easily than different penguin species or different iguana genera, then that would only be due to personal experience level rather than actual similarity of the taxa.

The two leopards are fairly easy. Amur are very fluffy and plush, and tend to be lighter in color. African have much shorter hair and tend to be brighter/darker in color.
 
The two leopards are fairly easy. Amur are very fluffy and plush, and tend to be lighter in color. African have much shorter hair and tend to be brighter/darker in color.

The iguanas have different morphology, head shapes, diets and completely different colouration. Not quite sure what your point is.
 
Don't get excited, it's an exhibit that uses stand ins (California Sea Lions instead of Galapagos Sea Lions, Grand Cayman Blue Iguanas instead of Galapagos Land Iguanas, Humboldt Penguins sinstead of Galapagos Penguins, Common Cownose Rays instead of Golden Cownose Rays etc) the only actual Galapagos species are the tortoises, some fish that aren't exclusive to the islands, and Sally Lightfoot Crabs which are unironically the most exciting thing about the exhibit
To be 100% honest this exhibit interests me most for the design aspects - the actual animal inhabitants....not so much as you noted most are stand in animals, some of which are not even great stand in (Blue Iguana) species. I personally would have rather seen this effort put into something like the Caribbean, where animals can be obtained and are just as fascinating.
 
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Galapagos Sea Lions, Galapagos Penguins, and Marine Iguanas are they illegal to be put in those exhibits causing the Californian Sea Lions, Humboldt Penguins, and Grand Cayman Blue Iguanas to be used instead of those?
 
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Galapagos Sea Lions, Galapagos Penguins, and Marine Iguanas are they illegal to be put in those exhibits causing the Californian Sea Lions, Humboldt Penguins, and Grand Cayman Blue Iguanas to be used instead of those?
The penguins and iguana this is essentially correct, as Ecuador does not export live animals as far as I have been told. I'm unsure if the sea lions are illegal per se, but California sea lion have a successful SSP and are acting as stand-ins, yes.
 
Galapagos Sea Lions, Galapagos Penguins, and Marine Iguanas are they illegal to be put in those exhibits causing the Californian Sea Lions, Humboldt Penguins, and Grand Cayman Blue Iguanas to be used instead of those?

Again, yes. Ecuador does not allow export of its native wildlife.
 
Galapagos Sea Lions, Galapagos Penguins, and Marine Iguanas are they illegal to be put in those exhibits causing the Californian Sea Lions, Humboldt Penguins, and Grand Cayman Blue Iguanas to be used instead of those?
You have asked this same question repeatedly, and it has been answered repeatedly, in the photo gallery for the zoo.
 
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