I don't think I fully understand your question, but I'll explain some things regarding collective nouns:
What you're describing Is a actually called "اسم الجنس الجمعى" (Collective Generic Noun), not "اسم الجمع" (Collective Noun), so, what's the difference ?
A collective noun is a word that describes a plural that doesn't have a singular variation, for example, the word "نساء" means "women", you can't get a singular variation from this word, for a singular woman we use the word "امرأة" which is a completely different word, so the word "نساء" actually have no singular, same with "إبل" "camels", again, no singular form, a singular camel is "جمل".
The Collective Generic Noun (CGN) is a word that describes a plural, which gets its singular variation by adding the letter "ة" at the end of it, like the examples you gave "تين - تينة" "سمك-سمكة" and so on.
So now, what's the difference between a CGN and a normal plural ?
Generic nouns don't describe multiple objects, they describe the "kind" of object, for example:
سمكة - singular - a fish
سمكات \ أسماك - plural - fishes (multiple)
سمك - CGN - fish (in general)
So the CGN is used when you mean the kind of thing, "I like fish أحب السمك" , but the normal plural is used when you mean a certain number or amount of the thing "I ate 4 fishes أكلت 4 سمكات", you can't describe a CGN with a numerical value ( unless you use a preposition like : I ate 4 OF the fish أكلت 4 من السمك ) .
So, to recap with another example: "ورق" (CGN) means paper (in general), if I say "ورقات or أوراق" (normal plural) I mean (sheets of paper), the singular is: (CGN+ ة ) = ورقة (a sheet of paper).
And finally, another difference between the two is that:
All (non-human) plurals take singular feminine pronouns (ex:هذه سمكات)
All CGNs take singular masculine pronouns (ex:هذا سمك)
I hope I cleared up some of the confusion (or maybe I added even more ?), if you have a specific question about kinds of plural for example please post them in a separate question.