For the second time in a week, I've found a male and female oil cat engaged in a repetitive circling behavior, and I can't tell whether this is an aggressive interaction or a spawning event where the male is attempting to inseminate the female. Since these oil cats are the only Auchenipterids I've ever owned, and I've had them only since August, I just don't have much experience with this group of catfish.
Honestly, I think it's an attempted, although maybe not successful, insemination event (but at the same time it seems too violent to be insemination). Other than this behavior, which I've only seen on two different days, I have never seen any other social interactions between my oil cats that are this spectacular. On many occasions in the past I've witnessed one oil cat push another out of a pipe (open at both ends), which I would certainly expect to be confrontational, but even that wasn't as active or violent-looking as this. And since this is specifically a male-female interaction (at least in the two instances I've observed), I think it's sexual.
In the video, two things stand out to me:
- At certain moments, one fish appears to form a reversed T-position pose with the other (reversed meaning the male's head is oriented to the female's midbody, not vice-versa); while I expect this for corys, I don't think I would have expected this for oil cats, given the fact that the males have the specialized anal fin/copulatory organ. I think I was expecting a behavior more like what is seen in guppies and other live-bearers with gonopodia.
- At one point in the video, the two fish appear to be locked together. While this is promising for mating, it doesn't appear that they are locked together at the midsection. In fact, it appears to me more likely that one of the fish has its pectoral spine locked against the other fish somehow, or perhaps the one fish is biting the tail or rear body of the other.
https://youtu.be/xT0mfS4zMiA
Thanks, Eric
P.S., The larger fish in this video is the male.