Hey, syno's....
I can't leave this go unattended, can I?
Ive had nigriventris for many years; the same 5; mind. They now reside in my best friends' tank. The oldest 4 are now past 18 years, so youl'll be keeping them for a while
I've kept Flavitaeniatus (a pair). These are very peaceful; but also VERY shy and truly nocturnal. I've seen them less than some Auchenipterids I've had!
Combining different syno-species can lead to trouble or joy, it depends on species; I'm writing a paper on this very issue; part of a series of papers for the cichlid-club herein the Netherlands (It's a 4-part series about keeping catfish in a cichlid setup)
A few scenario's that work AFAIK:
-Multiple-Target-plan: one big territorial syno and a shoal of small ones. (you've got this already)
-Avoid-Each-Other-Plan: one species of upsidedowners with a bottom dwelling species; both groups.
-Daring Plan: one species of territorials; single fish or a group of 4 or more; you need a big tank, to pull this off.
-The Great Mix Plan: group of small ones, a smaller group (3-5) of middle-sized peaceful ones and a single boss; this ONLY works if all three differ a LOT; this too needs a big tank or at least loads of hiding places.
A few scenarios thatoften lead to disaster AFAIK:
-Ping Pong Plan: two syno's, never mind species.
-Sissy & Bully Plan: a small group of big peaceful ones with a bossy one, in a too small tank (I've seen this case: single Angelicus and three decorus; DON'T do it; this was a 400 liter tank, with ample wood...)
-Too Fragile Plan: some species simply shouldn't be kept with too bossy syno's. To name a few:
"Too Bossy Syno's":
-S angelicus
-S schall
-S obesus
-S nigromaculatus
"Too Fragile Syno's":
-S contractus
-S decorus
-S alberti (it has character, but those big eyes and long whiskers are too easily damaged)
-S pleurops (biggest sissy of them all, needs nice tankmates)
Mind, it's from what I know personally, so there may be more or different experience out there
