How many years have you known the zebra pleco?
Posted: 10 Oct 2020, 11:17
I was asked to write a little thing recently, putting it down here. However, interesting to note how long, in years, has passed since I first kept this species. That's to say making the transition from pouring over the early photos to seeing it in life. For me, I think it is 1992. From my notes, I first saw this species in my LFS in Edinburgh in 1991. However, and I can't be sure, I really think it was an incorrect ID. I think it was Dekeyseria - it was sold for £200. However, I bought the next one, a year later, at £65, labelled "Emperor Peckoltia", pictured here. I worked in a supermarket at the time, this was nearly two weeks wages.
In 1997 I wrote, "If the Internet has adopted a catfish, then it is Hypancistrus zebra". It's ups and downs have been tracked online now for several decades partially fuelled by my personal fascination with this fish and it's unravelling mysteries. This culminated with the trip to the Rio Xingu in 2015.
In 1998 I translated the text of a lecture given by German aquarist Ingo Seidel (he needs no introduction, but should have one, being the father of much of this) into English and, as internet adoption and connectivity grew exponentially, so did the understanding, certainly in the English speaking world, of how to bred plecos - this led to a new fishkeeping tribe, the l-number keepers and breeders. Key to this were many of the concepts introduced in the lecture married with excellent photography and, at as it's crowning glory, the seminal picture of an adult male Hypancistrus resting next to a single captive-bred offspring. Ingo's message of "just try it" was an inspiration, and species after species or pleco has been bred in captivity with no end in sight.
PlanetCatfish was launched in 1996, with the ability to create an account and interact with others since 2002. As of October 2020, PlanetCatfish.com has 18,441 members who have created over 308,000 posts. Zebrapleco.com, started in 2004, has 3252 users with 40,566 posts all on the subject of this singular species. The site is less frequently added to, but visitors reading data remains fairly constant. Both share a database recording the number of keepers and breeders of this species. All this data is available from the species hub page at https://www.planetcatfish.com/hypancistrus_zebra. There are 50 breeding reports by members and a couple of feature-length articles on the species. At present there are 542 registered keepers of the species (if they don't check in every year, they are removed) and it is commonly reported for sale (because you can't reliably tell, we don't record W/C versus captive-bred) and added to members "wish lists".
It is the most wished for species and has been consistently in this position since records began (2016). On a side note, all 10 most wishes for species are plecos with one exception, the undescribed Corydoras sp. CW111. After the Common Ancistrus, Corydoras aeneus, C. sterbai, P. compta and C.
paleatus it is the most commonly recorded as kept species in the PlanetCatfish community (alluding more to it's status than it's
availability) but it's the third most documented captive reproduction (after the common Ancistrus and C. aeneus). Rather than being the pinnacle of pleco breeding, it appears to be a gateway to those specialists that go on from this species to the captive breeding and distribution of many more, primarily ancistrini, plecos. This data should be viewed as representing those with an interest in aquarium catfishes, more general aquarists possibly with less experience would not be represented by these numbers - what we are seeing here are the longer-term catfish or pleco enthusiasts.
Jools
In 1997 I wrote, "If the Internet has adopted a catfish, then it is Hypancistrus zebra". It's ups and downs have been tracked online now for several decades partially fuelled by my personal fascination with this fish and it's unravelling mysteries. This culminated with the trip to the Rio Xingu in 2015.
In 1998 I translated the text of a lecture given by German aquarist Ingo Seidel (he needs no introduction, but should have one, being the father of much of this) into English and, as internet adoption and connectivity grew exponentially, so did the understanding, certainly in the English speaking world, of how to bred plecos - this led to a new fishkeeping tribe, the l-number keepers and breeders. Key to this were many of the concepts introduced in the lecture married with excellent photography and, at as it's crowning glory, the seminal picture of an adult male Hypancistrus resting next to a single captive-bred offspring. Ingo's message of "just try it" was an inspiration, and species after species or pleco has been bred in captivity with no end in sight.
PlanetCatfish was launched in 1996, with the ability to create an account and interact with others since 2002. As of October 2020, PlanetCatfish.com has 18,441 members who have created over 308,000 posts. Zebrapleco.com, started in 2004, has 3252 users with 40,566 posts all on the subject of this singular species. The site is less frequently added to, but visitors reading data remains fairly constant. Both share a database recording the number of keepers and breeders of this species. All this data is available from the species hub page at https://www.planetcatfish.com/hypancistrus_zebra. There are 50 breeding reports by members and a couple of feature-length articles on the species. At present there are 542 registered keepers of the species (if they don't check in every year, they are removed) and it is commonly reported for sale (because you can't reliably tell, we don't record W/C versus captive-bred) and added to members "wish lists".
It is the most wished for species and has been consistently in this position since records began (2016). On a side note, all 10 most wishes for species are plecos with one exception, the undescribed Corydoras sp. CW111. After the Common Ancistrus, Corydoras aeneus, C. sterbai, P. compta and C.
paleatus it is the most commonly recorded as kept species in the PlanetCatfish community (alluding more to it's status than it's
availability) but it's the third most documented captive reproduction (after the common Ancistrus and C. aeneus). Rather than being the pinnacle of pleco breeding, it appears to be a gateway to those specialists that go on from this species to the captive breeding and distribution of many more, primarily ancistrini, plecos. This data should be viewed as representing those with an interest in aquarium catfishes, more general aquarists possibly with less experience would not be represented by these numbers - what we are seeing here are the longer-term catfish or pleco enthusiasts.
Jools