Thats a lovely looking fish Yann!!!! What sorta conditions does it require???
Balaji
Major: Now what's this... stone, stone, stone, (looks down at his hand) and scissors. Now. Scissors cut everything, don't they?
Sergeant: Not stone, sir.
Major: They're very good scissors!!
Very nice Yann. That is one hard fish to photo.
-Shane
"My journey is at an end and the tale is told. The reader who has followed so faithfully and so far, they have the right to ask, what do I bring back? It can be summed up in three words. Concentrate upon Uganda."
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
I keep mine in normal tap water around neutral pH mid soft water and 25-26°c of T°
No breeding has been seen nor happened here, and I am not aware of any breeding else either
I know the photo is crappy. You don't need to rub it in, though
This is somewhat like the catfishversion of the hatchetfish. Their whole bodyshape is adapted for a surfacebound life.
That's something way different for me after keeping Corydoras and the like for years and years
Just found out they really like to have fruitflies for dinner.
“Weekends don't count unless you spend them doing something completely pointless.”
They live for the hours of dusk and dawn! I remember mine went nuts for live daphnia that had been half dried so it didn't sink. It's a catfish for the bare-bottomed tank too - it will only live in floating vegetation if that is available.
Yan/Jools, what can you tell us about it's behaviour/ social interacting.
Are they territorial to there own kind ?
If not is it preferable to keep them in small groups ?
I kept mine in a rather big tanks with lots of floating plants in different zone of the tanks...
I never witness any schooling, they are much individuals, they would also rest in their own little place, either in floating plants or in the diftwood also!!
Never seen any agression or anything like that either
Yann wrote:Never seen any agression or anything like that either
Different experience here. In a large tank things went okay, but in a tank of 100x30x40 (cms) 6 of them were apparently too many, despite the fact they did well at the LFS (OutsideInside) and in the bag. They were not very fond of eachother, which resulted in a count down. The last specimen did well until the whole tank got wiped out.
My comment is a tack-on to Ben's compliment, who quotes Shane, who in turn compliments the OP before Kruseman's photo was ever posted. There is nothing to be confused about. Not that I don't appreciate your "peace-keeping", if I may, effort, Marc And I do like Kruseman's shot as well, as opposed to his self-assessment.
Marc van Arc wrote:
Different experience here. In a large tank things went okay, but in a tank of 100x30x40 (cms) 6 of them were apparently too many, despite the fact they did well at the LFS (OutsideInside) and in the bag. They were not very fond of eachother, which resulted in a count down. The last specimen did well until the whole tank got wiped out.
My group of 6 was kept in a 450 liter tank, probably the reason I didn't see any agression!!
Cheers
Yann