Help ID spiny eel

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Caol_ila
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Help ID spiny eel

Post by Caol_ila »

Hi!

Bought 2 of these fellows labeled as "African Spiny Eel" for 3 euros/each. The bigger one shows blue and red markings on the dorsal fin. About 8 and 5 cm long.
Any ID help would be apreciated.

Heres some (big+crappy) pixx:
eels in bag
eel
eel
eel
eel
cheers
Christian
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Caol_ila
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Post by Caol_ila »

cheers
Christian
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Post by Silurus »

I would guess Mastacembelus frenatus.
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Caol_ila
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Post by Caol_ila »

thank you

do i see that right that this is a rarely kept species? havent found much about them...
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Post by Caol_ila »

cheers
Christian
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Post by Mike_Noren »

I can't ID mastacembelids (except for some of the most common), but you're aware that if that is C. frenatus then it'll grow quite large and have a tendency to consider any fish that fits in its mouth as lunch?

Oh, I forgot - if you're looking for info, that species has also been called Afromastacembelus frenatus and, if I read Eschmeyer correct, the present name is Caecomastacembelus frenatus, so you may want to do a search for those names too.
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Post by sidguppy »

definitely not frenatus!

frenatus has tiny eyes (these have bulging eyes!), and frenatus has a lightcolored band on the back and dark sides wich gives the impression of the colors being "up side down".

Also frenatus is a very elongated species.

are these African or Asian? the proportion remind me a bit of Asians wich tend to be less elongated than the spaghetti-like species of Africxan rivers.
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Caol_ila
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Post by Caol_ila »

Hi!

The wholesaler said they came in from Nigeria.

If they get that big they get into a tank with the big Synos
Erwin wrote to me that all african Spinyeels have been moved back to Mastacembelus
M.spp. from the Niger River
M.nigromarginatus
M.loennbergii
M.decorsei
cheers
Christian
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Post by Caol_ila »

cheers
Christian
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Post by sidguppy »

nope, those are Africans allright.

I think Caecomastacembelus frenatus or C cryptacanthus.
I've kept exactly those fish, as shown in your last post!

unfortunately they're not that easy to keep. they're quite fragile, escape-artists (the tiniest hole in the hood and you'll find them dried up on the floor!), slow eaters (easily outcompeted for food by catfish) and highly territorial to each other!

a 500 L tank was too small for three 5" specimen.... :shock:
unfortunately I couldn't get more; 3 was all they had.
And IME many Mastacembelids are best kept single or in a group of at least 5 (7-8 is better), to spread all that pent-up nastiness.
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Post by Mika »

Sid i`ve send to you pm a week ago. Sorry to intterupt this thread, but this seems to be only way. :oops:
Well i wish i was a catfish
swimmin in a oh, deep, blue sea (Muddy Waters, Catfish blues)
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Post by Caol_ila »

eases my mind a lot that its not armatus...:)
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Post by sidguppy »

Mika, that pm never made it....I just checked and no pm with your nametag on it.


armatus can be vicious devils; agressive, piscivore and downright nasty.
not to mention 3/4 meters in length when adult.....

but armatus doesn't have the dark flank and light dorsal region these have; they have a very typical brown "net" print superimposed on a light background.

highly variable fish, but this pic shows what an adult armatus looks like

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