Did you know fantastic help is an anagram of Planet Catfish? This forum is for those of you with pictures of your catfish who are looking for help identifying them. There are many here to help and a firm ID is the first step towards keeping your catfish in the best conditions.
I guess I should give a little info.
This guy is ALWAYS upside down. Very seldom does he swim right side up.
He hardly moves, spends most of his time upside down at the front of the tank.
He measures a little over 5". I've had him a couple months and never seen him eat. I'm assuming he does when I'm sleeping though.
He enjoys playing dead and attempting to give me heart failure.
He stays at the top, belly up, and you can touch him, with no signs of life. I've poked him in the belly and he just stays there. He'll only move if you prode him hard enough LOL.
I looked at the pics of S/nigrita, and the diffrence is, my guy is black, very very dark...the spots only show up when you get very close and look at his fins, or when I use the camera with flash.
Many <i>Synodontis</i> spend a fair amount of time swimming upside down, so it's not surprising that <i>S. nigrita</i> would do too.
The spotting becomes less pronounced as the fish ages, so much so that the pattern seen on your fish is more or less typical for large <i>S. nigrita</i>.
I think this is Synodontis eupterus. The shape of the head and humeral process, eye size and color pattern are fully consistent with S. eupterus. The only anomaly is the lack of a feather fin, but this can be lost for a variety of reasons.
BTW, it's not entirely normal for S. eupterus to spend lots of time upside down at the surface. If it really does this, you may want to check your water quality.
Nope, not <i>S. eupterus</i>. The possibility crossed my mind, but the shape of the humeral process actually suggests otherwise (the tip is more rounded in <i>S. eupterus</i>). The shape of the snout and the length of the adipose fin all point to <i>S. nigrita</i>, as does the dorsal-fin shape.
There seems to be quite a variety in S nigritas, or are we dealing with more species, and is S nigrita sort of a "waste bin" species for any brown vaguely spotted Syno?
Two forms (or species?) jum out; it's the light whiskered brownish fish wich has relatively few small very dark spots (see the pics here), and another wich has very dark whiskers, and many brown spots (it's literally covered with spots) on a brown background.
I'll see if I can get pics somewhere.
for starts: the other "nigrita" looks a LOT like this one:
Plan B should not automatically be twice as much explosives as Plan A
There seems to be quite a variety in S nigritas, or are we dealing with more species, and is S nigrita sort of a "waste bin" species for any brown vaguely spoted Syno?
This seems to be the case. Christina's fish corresponds to the Nilotic form of <i>S. nigrita</i> (it's virtually identical to the drawing in Boulenger). I suspect that a number of these Nilo-Sudanic catfishes considered conspecific actually consist of more than one species.
But then, as I've mentioned, the spotting pattern changes with age (young fish are more heavily spotted).
I could be wrong but I would say Brachysynodontis batensoda. At least, I have a fish just like that, and that's what it was sold as. It spends most of its time upside down.
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It cannot be <i>Brachysynodontis</i> as the body is too slender and the adipose fin is too short. <i>Brachysynodontis</i> also has a membraneous flap on the hind edge of the maxillary barbels, which this fish lacks.