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  2. Poecilia sphenops - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poecilia_sphenops

    Poecilia sphenops, called the Mexican molly or simply the molly, is a species of poeciliid fish from Central America. It was once understood as a widespread species with numerous local variants ranging from Mexico to Venezuela, but these variants are today considered distinct species belonging to the P. sphenops complex and P. sphenops itself as being native to Mexico, Guatemala, and Honduras.

  3. Fancy molly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fancy_molly

    Gold mollies are yellow-gold like albino mollies but have dark eyes and occasionally scales edged in red. [3] Silver mollies have had all pigments but silver eliminated through selective breeding. [3] Chocolate mollies exhibit brown rather than black coloration. [3] In addition to the colors, fancy mollies differ in the shape of their fins. [3 ...

  4. Poecilia velifera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poecilia_velifera

    Poecilia velifera, known as the Yucatan molly and also as the giant sailfin molly amongst aquarists, [3] is a large livebearer that lives in coastal waters of the Yucatan Peninsula. These live-bearer ( Poeciliidae ) fish are particularly well known for both the extreme size variation among males, and the sexual dimorphism between males and ...

  5. Amazon molly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_molly

    Amazon mollies have a small dorsal fin consisting of 10-12 soft rays. [9] The position of the dorsal fin on the back of the fish is anterior, closer towards the head, than the position of the anal fin on the underside of the fish. They do not have any spiny rays on their fins. [10]

  6. Marilyn Monroe was unrecognizable at the time of her death - AOL

    www.aol.com/entertainment/2015-06-11-marilyn...

    According to the two morticians, who prepared Marilyn for burial, the legendary sex symbol had hairy legs, false teeth, and purple blotches all over her face when she was found dead aged 36 in 1962.

  7. Warmouth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warmouth

    However, the green sunfish generally has a greenish-blue vermiculate pattern on its cheeks, [9] a black spot near the base of the dorsal and anal fins, [7] fins that are bordered in yellowish-white [9] and no teeth on the tongue. [6] [9] The rock bass has five or six spines in its anal fin as opposed to the three in the warmouth. [6]

  8. Poecilia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poecilia

    The most commonly kept species are guppies (P. reticulata), mollies (P. sphenops or P. latipinna), and Endler's livebearers . Members of the genus readily hybridize with each other and so most commercially offered fish are hybrids (with guppies having some Endler, and mollies being a mix of common and sailfin mollies).

  9. Sailfin molly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sailfin_molly

    Sailfin mollies produce broods of 10–140 live young, depending on maturity and size, and females may store sperm long after the demise of their relatively short-lived mates. The gestation period for this species is about three to four weeks, depending upon temperature, and a single female may give birth on multiple occasions throughout the year.