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Catfishes (Siluridae).
Catfish links. Catfish inspire devotion from their keepers
second only to Cichlids.Consequently there are several websites that concentrate on catfish:
http://www.planetcatfish.com Since 1996 this has been where to begin
with catfish. The largest catfish photo archive
on the net is now expanding into an informative
database. Wide-ranging features include "catfish-of-the-month,"
illustrated articles that are much more anecdotal
and informative than the usual web species
profile, Loricariid "L-numbers,"
brief synopses of recent scientific catfish
articles etc., a catfish forum, plus a hub
for well-chosen links, with succinct notes
on what you can expect to find. Shane Linder
presides.
http://www.scotcat.com ScotCat offers very good articles on catfish
care and breeding; you can even discover
what your catfishes' scientific names actually
mean! Allan James is in charge.
http://www.catfish-corner.com/main.html The lively articles are my favorite aspect
of this club site.
Callichthyidae.
The Neotropical catfish family Callichthyidae
is found in most South American river drainages:
Paranŕ-Paraguay, Săo Francisco, Atlantic
Coastal basins in Brazil, the Amazon, Orinoco,
Maracaibo, Magdalena, as well as in a few
rivers in Panama. They present their highest
diversity in the headwaters of the Amazon
drainage and in the rivers draining the Guianan
shield, an ecological success that even outdoes
Apistogramma.
Links. Robert Reis' former pages devoted to the
Callichthyidae,— their phylogeny and geographical
distribution,— offering a catalogue of 130
Corydoras species have been pulled, but his
abbreviated introduction, cladistics and
references are in the Tree of life Web Project. Corydoras spp. The genus Corydoras has racked up spectacular successes in small
shallow watercourses from the Orinoco basin
to the Paraguay. A local population of C. ćneus even got stranded in Trinidad when sea levels
rose at the end of the last ice age. Over
138 species have been scientifically described,
and almost 60 more have been assigned temporary
"C-numbers." In their isolated
streams, often two or three Corydoras species
will be discovered living together ("sympatrically").
How they maintain their individuality as distinct species, by what subtle isolating
mechanisms of pre-spawning behavior or timing,
or perhaps characteristic odors, will provide
material for many interesting studies in
the new field of "ecological speciation."
It seems a shame that we like to bundle them
all together in mixed Cory herds and encourage
them to hybridize.
There's a recognizably Corydoras-like fossil,
59 million years old, reported John Lundberg,
who was exploring Amazonian fish diversity
in Natural History, Sept 2001. That would place an identifiable
Corydoras in the Palaeocene, along with the
first primates and the radiation of flowering
plants. The fossil, called Corydoras revelatus, was found in the 1920s by Prof. Cockerell
in El Sunchal, Jujuy Prov., Argentina, and
deposited in the British Museum. There are
photos of the little fossil Cory at www.scotcat.com
Air gulping. Every so often your Cories will make a dash
for the surface to gulp air. A highly-vascular
section of the intestine serves as an accessory
respiratory organ. The spent air, mostly
exhausted of its oxygen, is expelled from
the anus. In Corydoras, the swallowed air
plays an even more important role in hydrostatic
balance, keeping the fish neutrally buoyant.
Barbel erosion. Generally Cories are among the least demanding
fishes. One problem with keeping Cories under
imperfect conditions, however, is that their
barbels may erode. The ineradicable folk
tradition has long been that the barbels
were being "worn away" by sharp
gravel. I think that a fish that was prone
to suffer this way could only evolve in habitats
with very fine silty bottoms, and that consequently
it would have a limited distribution, whereas
every stream catchment area throughout wide
stretches of the Amazon-Orinoco basin has
its own Corydoras species— and often two
of them, co-existing side by side. How could
any organism evolve so delicately mis-tuned
to the varying sands and gravels of its streambed
environments and yet be successful over such
a wide area? If you think some streambed
gravels are rounder than others, keep a 10x
loupe by you and check out all the streambed
gravels you can find.
Some Cory keepers feel that barbel erosion
is more likely due to bacterial/fungal attack,
and that it may be reversed when water conditions
are improved. One mention of bacterial barbel
erosion, in C. concolor, is in an article by Allen James (of www.scotcat.com) archived among "Catfish of the Month
(April 2000) at www.planetcatfish.com.
Cathy Quinones posted
at rec.aquaria, 3
June
1994, that her C. julii lost their barbels but regained them when
their diet was improved (with tubifex); see
http://www.thekrib.com/Fish/corydorus.html
Bacterial infections are generally secondary.
The primary culprits in barbel erosion may
be skin flukes. A report of barbel "detachment"
in ictalurid cats being aquacultured, which
is ascribed to necrosis from gyrodactylus
(fluke) infestation, is mentioned in a Massachusetts Coastal Zone Management white
paper. Could these parasitic trematodes be an
issue in Corydoras barbel erosion also?
My own experience suggests that barbel erosion
might be related to long-term elevated nitrate
levels. Some of my C. schwartzi have experienced eroded barbels when nitrates
remained about 40
ppm. Is there a connection
here?
Almost like an answer to these concerns,
RTR posted at AquariaCentral, 30 Aug 2001:
"This particular myth has been around
almost as long as
I've been keeping fish,
and it refuses to
die.
"One of my favorite test tanks used
crushed glass substrate (not kiln-softened)
and a school of C. arcuatus corys (personal favorites) with fractured
glass slab "rockwork". A part of
the same shipment of corys went into a nearby
planted tank with which I had been having
problems with a high-organic substrate. After
just a few months, guess which tank had barbel
erosion? And a few weeks after unifying the
schools, guess who started recoving their
injured barbels while living over crushed
glass? I had in the past experienced occasional
barbel problems in corys (and Brochis-- they
are more sensitive IME), and always had credited
it to maintenance, and was able to clear
it with good tank upkeep. That fact and loss
of dwarf cichlids kept in organic-substrate
tanks cured me of ever having a high organic
substrate again. That problem tank was the
last, and I'll never have such again.
"I don't use the crushed glass any more
either. I really just set it for a temp tank
for the test. In the year+ it operated, I
had no problems with it, except that it grew
algae. I do have some crushed black glass
substrate, but it has been kiln-softened
to round the sharp edges.
"Corys in the wild live over a wide
variety of sustrates, from silt/mud to rocks,
and they are adapted to substrate digging.
You would expect some abrasion of the barbels
over anything but fibrous peat (as used for
killies), but if the substrate is clean,
they will not suffer the secondary infections
they will over polluted substrates. The secondary
infections are what erode the barbels, just
like fin rot does for the unpaired fins of
free-swimming fish.
"They do prefer more sandy substrates,
and will dig more freely in soft sand than
in gravel by a wide margin. But they can
be kept over either without damage, so long
as it is clean, and they can suffer erosion
over either if they are not.
I do not have much experience with Pictus
cats, but I do know their barbels are nitrate-sensitive."
Corydoras links.
Ian Fuller, chairman of the U.K.'s Catfish
Study Group and the author of Breeding Corydoradine Catfishes, maintains a website Corycats: the wonderful world of Corydoradine
catfish devoted to articles by him and others on
keeping, and especially on breeding Corydoras
and their close relatives, Aspidoras and Brochis. You'll find excellent photos of just about
all the named Cories, and the un-named ones,
currently being given C-numbers, too. Corydoras
weblinks complete the picture.
You might also check the ID of your Corydoras
among the huge repertory of Cory photos,
accurately identified, in the "Corydoras
Encyclopedia" at Yamamoto Yutaka's website
"I Love Corydoras": http://www.mars.dti.ne.jp/~yamyam/index-e.html Japanese fishkeeping is long-established,
high-energy, and
full of its own characteristic
flavor!
Of course Corydoras figure at www.planetcatfish.com and Allen James has a Cory section at ScotCat
www.scotcat.com, where you'll also find Ian Fuller's article
"Starting with
Corydoras."
Mike Edwardes has some good information about
half a dozen Corydoras species at his site "Mike Edwardes Tropicals", where he archives an article "Stumped?
Secrets of a Corydoras breeder." Some
good Cory links here, too.
There's a set of good articles on Corydoras
species by Paul Schuman at http://www.aqualink.com/columns/k-cory.html.
Eric Bodrock's modestly titled "Cory
crumbs" at AllOddball Aquatics (select "Articles" in the menu)
are really more than just crumbs of information
about breeding over thirty species of Corydoras
through the years. His tanks share a central
filtration system, and he finds that a spawning
in one tank will set off a whole chain of
spawnings through the system. If you're cories
are spawning in one tank, it seems to me
you could encourage other Cories by adding
a gallon of water from the spawning tank.
You'll find more articles by him at Ian Fuller's
site mentioned above.
Dr David Sands' volume devoted to Cories,
Keeping Aquarium Fishes: Corydoras, covers the Cories he knows so well in the
wild and in the aquarium: keeping them happy,
feeding and breeding them. Dr Sands also
offers a CD-ROM with over 30 minutes of Corydoras
videos, if you just can't get enough Cory lore.
Alas, Dr Sands' promotional website isn't very informative.
Rare Cory "contaminants." Sometimes quite rare Corydoras get shipped
as "contaminants" with similar-looking
but more commonplace species. Sort of like
rubies "contaminating" a shipment
of garnets, eh. Sharp-eyed and knowledgable
Cory geeks lurk on fish-delivery day at a
good LFS that isn't too far down the chain
from the original importer, and they get
to snap up the rare ones.
Mixed "breeds." What might look like rare "contaminants"
in a shipment of farmed Cories are increasingly
likely to be a sign that the whole bunch
are casual hybrids. Hybridizing might be
more excusable among amateurs. Confined in
our aquaria, one or two individuals of mixed
Cory species commonly find themselves thrown
together by fishkeepers with a stamp-collecting
bent, who think of them as merely "varieties."
When Cories are put together like a bowl
of mixed fruit, hybridizing can occur. Why
is hybridizing such a poor idea? I've never
been able to satisfy anyone who asked this
question. Decreased fertility in the second
generation never seems like a problem to
the questioner somehow. I feel that it's
disrespectful of the fishes. Hybridizers
imagine that something "new" could
be created, if you could select these spots
and combine them with that dark head, etc..
I feel instead that some fine-tuned species
could be lost if we blur all together into
one general-issue "mixed Corydoras"
aquarium strain. (In the U.S. this is already
happening to Lake Malawi cichlids.) A fastidious
aquarist won't force mixed company on the
fishes in his or her care. When someone asks
whether it's okay to mix Cories, I say, "Imagine
that you've been abducted by aliens. Kind-hearted,
responsible aliens, who have conscientiously
done their homework: they studied your DNA,
and now they set you up in the equivalent
of a high-end Hospitality Suite. Your roommates,
for the rest of your life-span (your DNA
checked out as almost identical) are ...two
chimpanzees...."
Spawning. More and more species of Corydoras are spawning
in aquaria, even the species that had a reputation
for being difficult, now that we understand
the basic triggers that initiate their spawning
cycle. In their native waters, apparently
Corydoras spawn when temperatures drop in
the first floods of soft water after a storm.
Recreating this event can be as simple as
a massive water change with cool water (under
70º even); a refinement is to time the
water change to follow closely after a sharp
drop in your local barometric pressure: check
the Weather Channel. This sounds like a smart
trick to remember. But then, I also like
the charming true story of the devoted Cory
lover who rattles sheets of galvanized tin
to create a boom of thunder in the fishroom
and sprinkles "rain" from a watering
can! There are variations on the Corydoras
breeding theme. Follow the details in articles
on breeding various Cories at www.scotcat.com.
Robert Goldstein wrote about spawning Corydoras
and their Callichthyid relatives for Aquarium Fish, Oct. 1991, in the AF archive and Alan Hosking-James offers his techniques,
"Breeding Corydoras (and Brochis) spp."
at www.e-aquaria.com . Also you may want to read Mike Edwardes
Cory breeding FAQS at www.planetcatfish.com.
Cories are sensitive to medication. Years
ago, when tests were done to test the salt-tolerance
of freshwater fishes, Corydoras died first.
Malachite green will poison Cories before
any other fishes are affected; it took me
years to learn never to use Malachite green
on a Cory cat. I pass this on to you.
Corydoras ćneus (Bronze Cory Cat). When I look at the armor of this armored
catfish, mixing the colors of bronze and
verdegris, it's pleasant to recall that Virgil's
epic hero, the one who fled Troy, the mythical
founder of Rome who loved Queen Dido, was
Ćneas. His name means "the bronze-armored
one." Even "Corydoras" speaks
of the armorer's craft, for it means "the
Doras--— that's another catfish--— with a
helmet."
This Cory has a wide distribution from Venezuela
(and even Trinidad, where the species was
first discovered, in 1858) south to La Plata.
Some localized populations of C. æneus
do show a streak of intense green, though
maybe the recent marketing names like "Neon
Green" and "Laser Green" overstate
the effect. In 2000 I started to see "Peru
Green" Cories at New York LFS, with
all but day-glo colors, both lime green and
orange. I was unconvinced of their authenticity,
even of the "Peru" part. But Don
Kinyon has been spawning these "Laser
Green," "Red Stripe" and "Orange
Stripe" cories, which may or may not
be local variant populations of C. æneus, and he notes that the resulting fry do
display their parent's amazing colors. Read
his article, "The Colors of Corydoras."
When fish are tank-bred for generations,
as C. ćneus has been, inbreeding can reinforce recessive
genes for albinism and melanism. Albino Corydoras ćneus are familiar enough; their pink and pallid
colors have all the charm of uncooked chicken
breasts. But in 1990 a Canadian? aquarist
bought some melanistic (entirely black) mutations
that are probably C. ćneus, which have been distributed among a few
cognoscenti around North America. They are
said to have come from Rio Apure, a Venezuelan
river that flows into the Orinoco, but the
specific collecting site of interesting fishes
is often a trade secret. They are unusually
handsome, with almost black bodies and garnet-brown
finrays, though I hear that they are not
quite so hardy as standard C. ćneus. Few albino fishes appeal to me, but I think
these black Cory cats are the most desirable
Corydoras I've ever seen, though I still
know them only from a photo.
C. paleatus. It's pleasant to remember that C. paleatus was first collected in Argentina by Charles
Darwin, who was on his way south towards
Cape Horn, in the role of a gentleman companion
to the captain of H.M.S. Beagle. The species
was scientifically published using Darwin's
specimens in 1842. The name paleatus comes from Latin palea, which means chaff. Linnaeus used the word
in botanical descriptions, and one of its
botanical senses has come to refer to the
overlapping scales at the base of the flower
that you see if you turn over a daisy. So
this "paleate" Corydoras has comparable
overlapping scutes or armored scales. Elegant
scientific naming makes you look twice!
These were the first Cories that spawned for me, in wintertime, with slightly cooler aquarium temperatures, about 75°. I never caught them at it, just found the single or paired eggs, carefully hidden near one another, mostly on the glass. C. paleatus was the first Cory that spawned in an aquarium
for anyone, but it wasn't til the 1990s that
aquarists realized how to trigger Corydoras
breeding with massive changes of softer water
at cooler temperatures, about 70°. Breeding
season at home is October through March—
the high water season. Larry Vires wrote
an excellent account of breeding Cories in
Aquarium Fish, July 1998.
Corydoras paleatus was "Catfish of the Month", March
1999 at PlanetCatfish.
Corydoras pygmæus. Their home are small tributary streams of
the Rio Madeira, a tributary of the Amazon.
They weren't known until 1966. They'd be
easy enough to overlook: adult length about
an inch. I bought mine as C. hastatus, but when I got them home I recognized that
they were C. pygmæus.
Mike Edwardes had success with these, until newt eggs
he brought in with some Myriophyllum from
a garden pond hatched in his absence and
ate all his C. pygmæus fry. An interesting disaster. He has three
side-by-side photos that make it easy to
identify which of the three mini-Cories you
have: C. pygmæus, C. hastatus or C. habrosus. The key to success, for Mike Edwardes, is
in giving them a small tank all to themselves:
" These diminutive fish seem to be intimidated
by even the most innocuous of tankmates."
And in reducing opportunities for fungus
with lowered pH, rainwater and peatwater
tannins.
Kaycy Ruffer tells how to distinguish the
mini-Corydoras and how they spawned for her
and how she raised the fry, at www.PlanetCatfish.com
C. panda. C. melanistius ("C. julii"). C. rabauti "myersi". I've had each of these at one time or another.
C. rabauti was named for Auguste Rabaut, the indefatigable
collector based in Brazil who in 1935 was
the first to export a shipping can full of
Neon Tetras, to a French banker; so pronounce
this species' name "ra-BOW-tie".
C. rabauti appeared in New York for the first time
in 1939. I especially like the subspecies
named for Dr. Myers, which is distinguished
by a dark smudge that looks like a black
eye; it comes from small Amazon tributaries
upstream from Manaus.
C. schwartzi. These are found in small streams near the
mouth of Rio Purus, Brazil, a tributary of
the Amazon. This species was named in 1963
for the late Willi Schwartz, the exporter
based at Manaus whose wife is the Robine
of Corydoras robinæ and whose son Adolfo has been complimented
in C. adolfoi. A dark head with an even darker "black
eye" and black spots, which tend to
arrange themselves in rows down the flank
and to form vertical rows across the tail
are features that give this species distinctive
panache. The silver background is crisply
metallic, the belly pure white. I currently
have a group of five. From their large size,
their broad beam as seen from above and their
portly carriage, with slightly swelling bellies,
I fear that they're all females.
These are a little shy. In the evening, I
lure them out of the shadows with Hikari
wafers and sit quietly in a dim room to enjoy
them. They form a shoaling group in a gentle
current and hold formation in midwater, or
they'll form a "stacking pattern"
above one on the gravel. (Is this a courtship
move?) Not all Corydoras hug the ground.
Some, like Schwartzies, can be found at all
levels in the aquarium, sometimes perched
on a sturdy leaf. By dividing up the available
territory, Corydoras species can specialise,
so that two Cory species can co-exist ("sympatrically")
in the same shallow backwaters.
Dianema longibarbis (Porthole Catfish). In all the attention lavished on adorable
Cory Cats, which is well deserved, I know
I've always neglected their close cousins
among the Callichthyinae, the bubblenest-building
subfamily. So now I've got four young Dianema longibarbis, which is smaller (getting to about five
inches) and easier to keep than either of
the other two Callichthyinae genera, Hoplosternum or Callichthys. They're mouse-colored, with a large dark
eye and speckles that arrange themselves
into a line of "portholes" down
the flanks, strongly countershaded with a
white belly. Porthole Cats are like Cories
redesigned on racier lines for grace and
speed, with a long flattened snout that carries
two pairs of barbels, a high sail of a dorsal
fin and a deeply forked tail fin. Breeding
these catfish is a rare event, which involves
a bubblenest, I hear. (There is an article
on breeding Hoplosternum thoracatum by Len Rebeck at http://www.fishroom.com.) As they mature, the Dianema females will
be larger and broader than the males, but
at just under two inches they aren't giving
any clues yet. I'm also told that the spiny
first ray of the pectoral fins will be thicker
in the males.
D. longibarbis were first imported into the U.S. in 1955,
according to Wiliam Innes. I don't see them
all that often, so I grabbed mine when I
had the chance. These mild-tempered social
catfish only thrive in the company of their
own kind. The first of them were found in
the Rio Ampiyacu, which empties into the Amazon at Pevas,
Peru, but they are widely distributed in
creeks and shorelines of small tributaries
of the Amazon, both upstream from Iquitos,
whence they are exported, and downstream
in the stretch of Amazon between Santarem
and Tabatinga, and in the right-bank tributaries
Xingú and Pacayá.
The Germans call them "Torpedo Cats."
From the forward placement of their mouths,
you wouldn't expect them to spend all their
time grubbing in the bottom, and they don't.
They'll dash to the surface to swallow a
mouthful of air like Cories or to eat flakes
as happily as they stand on their heads to
root out blackworms. Porthole Cats will hold
a place in mild current for minutes at a
time, or rest motionless, tilted upward,
lying on a leaf. An experienced fishkeeper
commented to me recently that these are one
of the few catfish with forward-facing mouths
you can trust with smaller fishes. If mine
had horizontal stripes on their tails, they'd
be the "other" Dianema, D. urostriata. I see that Dennis Rawlinson describes a
spawning of D. urostriata at www.planetcatfish.com. In his first report (Feb 2000) the spawning
took place under a floating plastic lid,
at pH 6.2, hardness less than 2oGH, and a cool temperature of 68-72oF. Dennis reduced the water depth to 4 or
5 inches. Alas, the first clutch of eggs
got eaten.
Loricariidae.
The Loricariids are the world's largest family
of catfishes. If you're really together,
you're calling these catfish "Lories"
now, as the late Al Ngui suggested, so that
you can reserve "Pleco" specifically
for the Ancistrinae and Hypostominae groups, the ones that include the traditional
Ancistrus and Hypostomus genera of armored
cats. There are three more divisions of the
Lories, Hypoptomatinae, which includes the dwarves,
Loricariinae or whiptails, like Farlowella and Sturisoma,
and the Neoplecostominae, which have mostly not been imported.
As for "dwarf" Lories, RTR put
it succinctly at an AC post, Oct. 2000: "There
are no real dwarf plecos. But then there
are no real plecos either. Plecostomus was a genus of suckermouth catfish (Loricariids),
which is no longer a valid name... smaller
suckermouths were imported with no known
or even identified scientific name and called
"Dwarf Plecos" to distinguish them
from the "real" plecos, such as
Hypostomus plecostomus (the species name is still valid). The dwarfs
are quite different fish, from genera such
as Peckoltia and the small Panaque species, most being 3-6" at full maturity.
There is no dwarfism involved, merely entirely
different fish with a family resemblance
to their several times larger cousins."
When your Lories hang on the glass, take
a magnifier to see how they are entirely
covered with odontodes, the teeth that are
embedded in their skin, which are sometimes
thickened to produce spines. Even an Otocinclus
is covered with tiny prickles.
Links. Jon Armbruster's Loricariid Home Page is the site to scope out if you're curious
about any of these Lories. This is one of
the best websites devoted to a family of
fishes-- scientific but accessible. There's
a list of taxa, a key for identification,
a phylogenetic tree showing how the various
genera are related to each other, all by
the taxonomist who is the definitive reviser
of these catfishes.
Chætostoma sp. "Recife?" I bought three of these at a little over
an inch length, represented to me as an unidentified
"Otocinclus species." They were
covered with overlapping charcoal gray dots
that almost entirely obscured a skim-milk
blue-white background which showed on their
bellies. It's probably a juvenile coloration.
Months later, they still tolerate one another,
but they are steadily growing on a constant
diet of algae and biofilm, which I supplement
with continual spinach and zucchini. Getting
a glimpse of them is like bird-watching;
it involves long sessions sitting motionless
in a darkened living-room.
Links. Shane Linder's notes on the similar "Bulldog"
Chaetostoma from Recife, LDA25, are at "Planet Catfish" Their attentuated angled caudal fins always
look as if they had been chewed.
Farlowella acus (Common Twig Catfish). Farlowella are ecological end-of-the-line
specialist herbivores, like an elongated,
extreme Otocinclus. F. acus are widely distributed in the right-bank
(southern) tributaries of the Amazon, and
further south, in the basin of the Rio Plata.
Other Farlowella species take their place in the left-bank,
northern Amazon tributaries, and in the Orinoco.
The great river is a barrier among these
species.
They are delicate and won't last long if
you can't give them a lush planting, some
well-aged driftwood with a softened algal
surface and rich biofilm meadows that you
supplement with chopped spinach and zucchini
slices. They like the softest water you can
muster, some mild current, and shadowy areas
where they can make themselves invisible.
Leaf litter helps and some twiggy brush.
Farlowella need gentle tank companions.
Males and females can be identified with
a magnifier while they cling to the aquarium
glass. Look at their "noses" (rostra).
The females have wider noses that are covered
with minute bristles. Male snouts are narrower
and bristle-free.
Eventual length is just under six inches.
Hypostomus punctatus (Common Pleco). This is truly a "Plecostomus."
That rhymes with "preposterous"
by the way, not "PLEEco-STO-mus"
the way I was mispronouncing it for years;
Mike Wickham says that a $100 suckermouth
catfish is a "Plecostoomuch." Hmm,
okay.
Hypostomus and Ancistrus species are part of the Ancistrinae subfamily of Loricariids. These are the
Lories with the interopercular odontodes,
since you asked.
The genus Hypostomus already contains about 116 species, many
of them indistinguishable to the amateur.
Either Hypostomus punctatus is the most successful, most widely-distributed
species of Loricariid in South America, or
"Hypostomus punctatus" is actually
just a grab-bag name for a cluster of closely-related
Hypostomus species. Punctatus is "spotted," and sure enough,
they all are! These are not cute little dwarves,
at least not forever. If you don't thoughtlessly
stunt your Common Pleco by confining it in
a tank that's too small, it will slowly grow
to a foot long! But ordinarily you'll see
it offered at an apparently manageable three
inches at the LFS.
Other people seem to get more fun out of
their Common Plecos than I do. Mine squirms
under an overhanging ledge, rooting out just
enough gravel to make a tight fit, and there
she spends her days immobile, looking as
much like part of the rock as she can. Now
I'm searching for some rock that more exactly
matches her speckled and splotched yellowish-olive
and tobacco brown coloring.
Many Lories rasp at the surfaces of waterlogged
wood and depend on wood to supplement their
diet. Panaque species are especially noted for this, and
some even have spooned chisel-like teeth
to help them. Loricariids can be assumed
to carry some kinds of co-evolved protozoan
and bacterial fauna to digest lignin for
them, for no vertebrate can digest lignin,
and now J.A. Nelson at Towson U. is unravelling
this specialized feeding niche. His illustrated
article, "Respiration in wood-eating catfishes" is the best intro to this story. He finds
that the breakdown of lignin in Panaque guts
is effected by a consortium of microorganisms.
Some insects notorious for eating wood also
depend on symbiotic partnerships to break
down lignin. Termites are a well-known example,
but Cryptocerus wood roaches and passalid
bess beetles also make a living chewing splinters
of wood and getting the lignin digested for
them by intestinal protozoans. Interestingly,
all feed their offspring directly from the
anus, so that the protozoan community among
the wood fibers can colonize the intestines
of juvenile insects too. I have a point in
mentioning this shared phenomenon. To come
back to the aquarium, this suggests a treatment for rehabilitating a half-starved
Lory: — give it the company of a plump, well-fed
one. In rooting among detritus the two fish
are bound to share some beneficial,— perhaps
essential— gut protozoa. If they are socially
too incompatible, try vacuuming detritus
and adding it to the newcomer's tank.
Links. A good Pleco overview is Ingo Seidel's article
"Suckermouth catfishes from the Ancistrinae
group" at "PlanetCatfish" And you might want to see Dennis Kramb's
guide to "Plecos" at theKrib.com
Common Plecos don't need to be kept at the
steamy tropical temperatures we tend to provide
for them. There are native populations as
far north as the Pacific slope of Costa Rica
and as far south as the sub-tropical waters
of Uruguay. In the USA, feral populations
have established themselves in south and
central Florida and also in the San Antonio
River TX, where they escaped from the Zoological
Gardens. In Florida they are proving tolerant
of both chilly winter temperatures and brackish
water near the mouths of small rivers and
canals. Exactly which Hypostomus species
are represented in these feral populations
has been argued for twenty years. A Pleco
fished out of Dade County waters measured
69 centimeters! See http://lionfish.ims.usm.edu/~musweb/nis/Hypostomus_plecostomus.html
Otocinclus spp. Mixed-species stocks of Otos are usually
imported, so all the Otos mentioned here
are being given their conventional "trade"
names. Identifying Otos at the species level
depends on professional techniques, like
accurate counts of scales along the lateral
line, or details of the dentition and the
body armor, and symptomatic ratios of one
body measurement to another. The details
we amateurs might pick out, for instance
minute differences in patterning, such as
the blotch on their caudal peduncle, are
less secure.
One distinction is clear at the species level,
anyway. Otocinclus don't have an adipose fin. If your Oto has
an adipose fin, it's one of the fourteen
species of Parotocinclus. A commonly-seen one is Parotocinclus maculicaudatus, a "Golden Oto" with brown blotches
along the lateral line and a larger blotch
on the caudal peduncle. The leading rays
of dorsal, pectoral or caudal fins are red
with brown banding, a feature you might not
detect til you get a chance to photograph
your Otos.
A specific name is rarely offered at the
LFS. Often they are rather arbitrarily offered
as O. affinis, O. arnoldi, or O. flexilis, according to the German site "Aquatime" There you are cautioned to pay close attention
to which species you have: O arnoldi and O. flexilis have backs and fins peppered with dark flecks
of various sizes, with a broken sidestripe.
The real O. affinis has a light gray back and a very narrow black
stripe, which ends before the tailfin and
has no blotch on the caudal peduncle. The
website has good pixfor identifying these
species, taken from Aquaristik Aktuell. This website makes the point that Otos
are happier at room temperatures, yet Paul
Kjaerland's Otos spawned at 25°C (77°F).
Perhaps cooler "winter" months
produce hardier Otocinclus.
My Otos-- the commonest species on the market
here in New York-- seem to be either O. macrospilus or O. vittatus. O. macrospilus (Colombia, Ecuador and Peru)is illus at www.planetcatfish.com. There is a shaped band on the tailfin,
just inside the clear fin edge. A large blotch
on the caudal peduncle. No adipose fin, of
course. (The presence of one is a characteristic
of Parotocinclus species.)
You know that Otos spend most of their waking
lives working their way across algal films.
If they have the security of floating plants
nearby, they'll even work the underside of
the surface film that forms on still waters. It's a lipid
layer to which algal cells and bacteria tend
to stick, attracting plankton animals. So
our little herbivores are getting a more
balanced diet than you might think.
Otocinclus have three familiar behavior patterns:
they feed, as I described; they do a skittering
chaotic scramble that is hard to follow,
like a butterfly's unpredictable flight,
which could be a handy evasive activity with
some practical survival value. And they "freeze."
If you've ever seen a cryptically-patterned
butterfly come to rest on rough gray bark,
fold its wings and virtually disappear, you'll
sense how useful it is for an Oto to "freeze"
on a slender waterlogged branch, say one
about as big around as he is, and similarly
disappear. LoMax13, posting from Gainesville
FL at AquariaCentral a while ago, had this
to say: "What's up with that mad dash
thing? It's like they're having a panic attack.
They move around like— 'oh crap I can't find
enough algae. I'm going to die! Oh...OK here's
some more right here. Whew.'" (I just
had to pass this on.) Otos will also 'play
dead:' Jinlong, Mission Viejo CA, noted:
"When I initially added the otos to
the 40g, one of the baby angels decided to
suck an oto off the side of the tank. He
pulled it off by the dorsal fin! As he did,
another angel came up and grabbed the poor
oto by the TAIL! The two angels then played
tug of war with the poor oto until it flipped
loose somehow and fell to the bottom of the
tank, where it lay, belly-up. I was convinced
it was dead, and apparently so were the angels,
who nudged it with their noses for a minute
or two before abandoning the toy as no longer
interesting. Seconds later, the oto went
from "freeze" to "dash"
mode and hid behind the heater. Two months
later, the same oto is still fat and happy."
"Solo Oto? Oh no! No solo Oto!" Don't keep them solo; they'll "freeze"
unhappily under a leaf and pine for reassuring
company. A "freezing" Oto may just
be resting, or merely too full to feel ambitious.
But if there is no other Otocinclus in the
vicinity, I think a sole Oto that does an
unusual amount of "freezing," is
expressing a symptom of unease and tension.
It's social stress: "Where is everybody?
Why is it so quiet in here? There must be
some unseen danger lurking. Better just 'freeze'."
Why newly-arrived Otos can die like flies. Otocinclus are notorious for dying like,
well, like Otos,—when you first get them
home, though once they've acclimated to your
planted tanks they live for years. Aquarists
beat themselves up over this, but I think
it's not our fault. Here's the thing: no
vertebrate vegetarian can digest cellulose,
not one! so each carries a species-specific
community of anaerobic bacteria (and some
protozoans) that do the work. Ruminants even
have a special fore-stomach (the rumen) where
grass is fermented in a rich bacterial soup,
protected from stomach acids. Dairy cows
are nourished, not so much by grass, but
by bacterial by-products, which include some
vitamins, and by digesting some bacteria:
cow breath! Now, look at the size of the
Oto. Scarcely room for a billion gut bacteria
in there to do the work, eh? Starved Otos
in transit can lose so much of their gut
bacteria that the internal ecosystem doesn't
revive,— even with a glut of tasty algae
in your tank! It just passes through their
system, like when you were too hasty eating
that corn-on-the-cob, remember? Not much
nutrition when the kernels passed right through,
because your system couldn't digest them
open. Otos need a jungley tank with lots
of leaf surfaces to run over. (If you can
count your Otos, you haven't got enough plants.)
But the vegetable supplement we give them
(zucchini, spinach, etc.) has to be constant, or else they won't
have the gut bacteria to process the green
treat when it finally does arrive. Hopefully
with your algae, and plenty of natural green
cover, and your constant feedings of spirulina
flakes or algae wafers plus veggies every
few days, Otos that aren't too far gone should
thrive with you. Females are noticeably wider
and plump, but though a healthy male is leaner,
he shouldn't have a concave look, when seen
from the side.
SegaDojo recently offered the suggestion
that Otos might be unusually sensitive to
nitrate. That might go far to explain Otos'
sensitivity. "As a rule," G. Sterba
wrote in 1967 (in Aquarium Care, p. 257) "newly imported wild-caught
fish from tropical waters poor in nitrate
and nitrite are particularly sensitive."
Breeding. Commercial Otos are still all wild-caught,
I believe. Spawning Otos in aquaria is unusual
enough to draw attention. Alec in Ontario
had Otocinclus spawning for him in 1999:
"although they have not bred in a few
months. For a while they were spawning every
three weeks or so. My females are about 30-40%
larger than the males, at least in the species
that I have. There are also subtle structural
differences, and the females usually have
an extruding vent. I have two females and
three males, but they do not pair off. It's
basically the female and whatever male manages
to fend off the others and get to her first.
During the entire spawn, her eggs are usually
fertilized at least once by each male. She
will go along from leaf to leaf until she
finds one she likes. Meanwhile, the males
are all jostling along behind her. They will
run their mouths along her entire body and
position themselves as close as they can
to her. When she finds a suitable leaf, she
zips underneath it, and the lucky male wraps
his body around her snout and holds her in
place while she deposits single eggs on the
underside of the leaf.
"They consistently produced fry, but
I was never able
to raise any, and by the
time I set up a dedicated
fry tank, they
had stopped spawning.
I am hoping they will
resume in the summer
again."
Chuck Huffine gave a detailed account of
his spawning O. affinis to the Aquatic-Plants Digest. The spawning
pair were in a densely-planted 20 gal. without
the distractions of other kinds of fish (an
important point), though Huffine senses that
communal spawning might be more successful.
"Oto's seem to be quite territorial
despite their small size, and I suspect this
fact may be one of the secrets in spawning
them, along with water quality and diet.
The Otos I keep in community tanks have not
spawned, nor have they exhibited spawning
behavior to my knowledge despite similar
tank conditions. The pair that do spawn live
alone with the exception of shrimp,"
Huffine noted. Weekly water changes with
cooler water seemed to encourage spawning
behavior. The eggs were carefully placed
on a single plant of Bacopa caroliniana and were guarded, a characteristic Loricariid touch. Follow
the hyperlink above, for more of the interesting
details.
"Attack" Otos. I've never had a "problem" Otocinclus
that developed a habit of rasping the body
slime off other fishes, but I hear some individuals
develop a taste for it. My hunch is that
Otos are more inclined to snuffle at the
flanks of other fishes in rather sterile
environments, when the only available substiture
for algae is a Hikari wafer. More natural
grazing grounds are spread over all the surfaces
of the planted aquarium. When Heinz Bremer
and Ulrich Walter examined the nutrition
of discus fry, which graze on their parents'
slime and on specialized nutritious cells
shed intact into the mucus, they found microorganisms,
especially diatoms and bacteria, settled
in the mucus surface. So the bizarre Oto
habit isn't incomprehensible. I think
it's mildly aggressive behavior, too; I've
seen an Oto that had been repeatedly pestered
by another fish, turn on the harasser finally
and do some defensive mouthing that was modestly
aggressive.
Otocinclus on the web. One of the best Internet articles on Otocinclus
is Calilasseia's account, perilously archived
in the "Bottom feeder Frenzy" forum
at www.FishProfiles.com. Her Otos go under the name of O. arnoldi.
At WetWebMedia.com, Bob Fenner's article
"The ideal algae-eater? the littlest
South American suckermouth catfishes, genus
Otocinclus" gives some of the Web's best pointers for
buying Otos and keeping them hale and hearty,
mostly from the perspective of the importer/wholesaler,
with useful points for picking out healthy
stock, handling and acclimating them. He
ends with a long list of Oto articles in
the print media. Two points that he doesn't
mention, which I think are equally important:
1) Otos share gut bacteria: their need for
the company of other Otos isn't merely social.
And 2) partly because of their need for plentiful
oxygen, Otos thrive at room temperature,
in the 60s and low 70sF, rather than in the
steamy conditionss we are inclined to offer.
Another excellent article, "Otocinclus:
'Little Monkeys' in the Planted Aquarium,"
by Julian Dignall and Dinyar Lalkaka, outlines
recent name changes among Otos, describes
some of their natural ecotopes and techniques
for acclimating them to the aquarium. It's
also archived at PlanetCatfish
Robyn Rhudy's Otocinclus page also has basic details --and some personal
experience and further links, too.
...and Parotocinclus too. At "Scotcat.com" you'll find an interesting description of
breeding the sister genus, Parotocinclus. But the super Parotocinclus article, full of color photos to compare
to your own dwarf Lory is in the section
"Ingo's catfish of South America"
at www.planetcatfish.com.
Otocinclus cf. affinis. Out of a couple of dozen published species,
maybe half a dozen turn up in your LFS from
time to time. Compare your mystery Otos first
to O. affinis— "Golden Otos," Baensch calls
them, and illustrates a very golden one indeed.
Whether we have the right species name or
not, these are the Otos you see everywhere,
and the ones most commonly spawned. They
come from southeast Brazil, the area round
Rio de Janiero. The specific name is currently
a little questionable. Not for us to fret
about, though. That "cf." in the
name above means "comparable to."
It's a cop-out that makes me look less clueless
than I am and more like I have some serious
scientific reservations about the name I'm
using.
O. cf. flexilis. From Rio Grande do Sul, in southernmost
Brazil. In this Oto, the black lateral band
breaks into blotches towards the tail.
O. cf. vittatus. To about 1.5in. This Oto is from the Mato
Grosso of Brazil, and small tributaries in
the Paraguay drainage. I have a trio, sold
to me as "Giant" Otos! (snicker) Indeed they are slightly bigger than the
most familiar Oto, O. affinis. Mine correspond very closely with the photos
at "Planetcatfish" where O. vittatus was Catfish of the Month for Dec 1996. O. vittatus features a speckled back on a gray ground,
a broader lateral stripe ending in a peduncle
blotch, and wavy black lines in the tailfin,
with white spots in the base of the upper
and lower fin lobes. Paul Kjaerland had some
unexpected luck when a small group began
laying eggs for him one summer, at a temperature
of 25°C and a pH of 7.5, and he got some
juveniles out of the resulting fry. Of course
you wouldn't keep these or any Otos except
in a well-planted tank with a tendancy to
grow algae, in peace-loving company, and
in water that was soft to moderately soft.
Mine get a continual supply of blanched vegetables,
a little at a time, and no more till they've
finished what they've got. But I don't pull
out the spinach leaf after 24 hours; they
like it best when it's slimy olive-gray and
coming apart. Then they have to forage for
algae for 24 hours before they get veggies
again. Even the male is mildly plump on this
regimen, but I can recognize the female by
her broader beam.
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