
I saw the most commons fish and I think that is a Pterygoplichthys pardalis but I'm not too sure...
it is long 35 cm and it's 27 years old
Someone can help me?
I'd like to know what is its max lifespan ...

Lorenzo
Sure, but to even get some INTERESTING food, I'd have to resort to English I think. I have spent a few days in Italy, and I know that my life would be very dull if I kept using only my very limited Italian knowledge...errichello5 wrote:It's a good start for the holiday
Intersting, how long does Pterygoplichthys pardalis live in nature?In captivity, I'd expect these to exceed 25 years if kept in good conditions.
I remember seeing a website with oldest recorded fish ages for different species in captivity (in some cases unsubstantiated), but annoyingly I can't find that link now. I think anything in the high twenties is pretty good for a loricariid- synos are renowned for living beyond 25 years, but most large loricariids I've seen suggest that somewhere around 18-20 is more normal. Mats is right that information is pauce at best for wild fish lifespans, but I'd concur that longevity in well-maintained aquaria (adequate water chemistry, sufficent volume and suitable diet, etc.) is likely to exceed wild lifespans for most species, at least the non-delicate ones.MatsP wrote:There is extremely little data on lifespan of wild fishes in general. I would say that they are more likely to live long in captivity than in the wild.
He is just happy that he got so old ;)Anyone else think those eyes look strangely shiny? I wonder what that's about.