FAQs Giant Sailfin Plecos, Genera
Glyptoperichthys, Liposarcus, Pterygoplichthys:
Compatibility
Related Articles: Loricariids, Otocinclus, From
Pan-ack-ay to Pan-ack-zee, A Detailed Look at the Bizarre But
Beautiful Panaque Catfishes by Neale Monks
FAQs on: Glyptoperichthys,Liposarcus, Pterygoplichthys, Sailfin Giants
among the Loricariids 1, Large Plecos
2, FAQs on: Large
Plecos Identification, Large Plecos
Behavior, Large Plecos
Stocking/Selection, Large Plecos
Systems, Large Plecos Feeding,
Large Plecos Health, Large Plecos Reproduction,
Related Catfish FAQs:
Loricariids 1, Otocinclus,
Other Loricariid Genera: FAQs on: Ancistrus, Baryancistrus, Genera Farlowella, Loricaria, Sturisoma,
Rhineloricaria: Twig Plecostomus, The Zebra Pleco, Hypancistrus zebra,
Hypostomus, Peckoltia : Clown
Plecostomus, Lasiancistrus,
Panaque, Pseudacanthicus, Scobanancistrus, L-number
catfish, Loricariid
Identification, Loricariid
Behavior, Loricariid
Compatibility, Loricariid Selection, Loricariid Systems, Loricariid Feeding, Loricariid Reproduction, Loricariid Disease, Catfish: Identification, Behavior, Compatibility, Selection, Systems, Feeding, Disease, Reproduction, Algae
Eaters,
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Plec harassing my ADF 6/6/12
Hi, I'd really appreciate your advice re a new addition to my tank
- it's been up and running for about 4 months, (60 x 30 x 35cm, heater,
Fluval sponge filter, bubble stone, live and fake plants, bog wood well
soaked, a couple of ornaments) with a Siamese fighter, a small common
Plec (about 4cm long at the moment, but steadily getting bigger),
<And MUCH too bug for this aquarium. Do understand that kept correctly
he'll get to about 15-20 cm within the first year, and up to 45 cm by
the second year. These are MASSIVE, MESSY fish with no place in any
aquarium as small as yours. If you want an algae-eating catfish, then
return this fish IMMEDIATELY and instead buy a juvenile Bristlenose
Plec, a charming little catfish that does a better job at eating algae
and only gets to about 12-15 cm in length.>
4 neon tetra and 4 penguin tetra, plus I recently added 3 platies. The
fish all seem to have settled down with each other and seem happy, no
behavioural issues and no illnesses, and the live plants are growing
nicely, BUT - I added an ADF two weeks ago, purchased from my local
specialty fish shop in good faith (having really quizzed the shopkeeper
as to whether my setup was suitable), and several times I've seen the
Plec harass him to the extent I've had to gently chase him off with the
net for fear of damage to the poor frog.
<Yes, this combination is a bad one.>
I'm being very careful about making sure he gets his share of
bloodworms, by distracting the other fish at the far end of the tank and
then pipetting them down to his favourite corner and watching him eat
several;
I'm also mindful of the water level and he seems quite happy taking a
couple of strokes to the top for a gulp of air (plus he likes sitting on
the top of the filter nearly out of the water) but I'm really very
worried that the Plec and the little guy are going to prove to be
incompatible. He has lots of hidey spaces to get away from the Plec, but
I know that the slightest damage could be very dangerous to him and of
course whenever he comes down to his corner to eat, if the Plec is near
him it will dash over and very vigorously hoover his back. The rest of
the fish pay him no mind at all. I thought perhaps that the Plec has a
taste for frog slime and is greedily cleaning him up, but I don't know
whether actually he's being aggressive and is trying to hurt him? I'd be
really grateful for some advice here! I'd rather rehome the Plec than
the frog (but if so are there any other bottom feeders that would be an
appropriate substitute, or would a snail be better?)
<Nerite snails are outstanding algae-eaters and would work very well in
this tank. Tylomelania spp snails would make fun scavengers; there are
lots of them sold under various names, use Google to see pictures of
them. Don't get an Apple (= Mystery) snail though -- they're difficult
to keep and don't eat much algae anyway.>
I also read that they like company so would be very happy to get a
companion for him if you think rehoming the Plec is the best idea.
<See above.>
Apologies for the long email, and thanks in advance for your input.
Yours, Alexandra
<Glad to help. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Plec harassing my ADF – 6/6/12
Hi Neale, just wanted to say very many thanks for the fast and helpful
reply - I'll see about rehoming the Plec immediately. Thanks again Alex
<Real good. Glad to help! Neale.>
Armored Catfish (Loricariids) Devastating Florida....
4/23/12
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/armored-catfish-wreaking-havoc-south-florida-lakes-182812663.html#more-4190
Large Sailfin Pleco
Questions... Sys., comp. ??? 10/12/11
Hello, I have read looked through this site many times, but this is the
first question I have asked.?
<Is it?>
I have a large Sailfin Pleco that I was given two years ago.?
<?>
He spends his summers in my roughly six thousand gallon Koi pond
outside on? the eastern shore of Maryland.? He is about two to two and
a half feet long.?
<Neat!>
The Koi are roughly two to three feet with an occasional exception.? I
keep mostly saltwater tanks, but this Pleco normally spends his winters
in a tank with South American cichlids that I have had for years.? This
year they have started to die off, I guess from old age as water
parameters seem good, and they are around seven or eight years old.?
(Is this a good age?)?
<For many, yes>
My question is, my wife has been asking for a peaceful schooling tank,
like tetras etc.?
<??What is with the question marks?>
I was wondering if I could still overwinter a Pleco this large with
small community tropical fish. It would be a seventy five gallon tank
with assorted schooling species. ? I want to know, because this will be
the last freshwater tank in my home.? I have found that I much prefer
outdoor fish or saltwater for the challenge.?
<Should be fine, as long as there is room for all, sufficient
aeration, filtration>
I know Plecos can suck on mucus membranes
<Mmm, not all species, no>
and be predatory if not given enough food, he eats a wide variety of
vegetables when he is indoors and is pretty much invisible
outside.?
Thanks for the help
<Please do peruse our "large Pleco" files:
http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/BigPlecSysF.htm
and the ones linked above. Bob Fenner>
Re: Large Sailfin Pleco Questions 10/12/11
Thanks for the reply.? I had looked though the Pleco section, but was
not sure about so large a fish with smaller ones.? I am not sure about
the question marks.? Must have been formatting issue.?
Thanks again
<I guess so? Sometimes large specimens, species of Loricariids will
go after smaller ones. Cheers?
BobF>
Re: re: Crayfish changing
colors? Now Pleco comp. 1/30/11
Thank you for your response. About the Plecos I had three. Two were
about 4 inches. The third is 8 inches.
<Whoa! Big boy! These are generally fine w/ larger crustaceans, as
long as the latter have sufficient hiding spaces to get away during
molts>
I gave a friend the two smaller ones. They I think are Sailfin Plecos.
Will the big one cause problems with the Cray.
<It might... I'd keep the two smaller ones, give the larger
away. Please
read here re: http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/BigPlecCompF.htm
And thank you again very much I highly enjoy your site. It has helped
me diagnose and save many fish.
<Ahh! Deeply gratifying to read/understand that we've helped
you. Cheers, BobF>
Three questions? Re Cray, lg. Plec...
1/31/11
Sorry about the two emails. Kids like to mess with stuff. Anyway how do
I get the Pleco and crayfish to leave each other alone?
<Separate them>
The Pleco has rips in her tail from the Cray. She is living behind a
filter tube while the Cray patrols the bottom.
In the tank is
4 barbs iam getting more soon I know they like to school
8 inch Sailfin Pleco
2 Chinese algae eaters I now know they get huge and mean.
1 4inch Cherax quad.
Again I am so sorry about the split email and for being a pain in the
ass.
Thank you again
C. Conner
<Different systems. B>
Three questions? More re Crayfish,
Pterygoplichthys 1/31/11
Hello again thank you for your answers to my previous question. I found
out my Cray is for sure a female Cherax quad.
My first question is purple up safe to use in freshwater aquarium to
supplement crays calcium and iodine requirement?
<It is>
Secondly my crayfish and Pleco seem to fight? Its not all the time and
mainly concerns caves. The quad changes caves almost daily. And the
Pleco gets evicted from her driftwood
<... these animals need more room... and/or different containers.
B>
Re: Three questions? More re Crayfish, Pterygoplichthys
2/1/11
Thank you yet again for your response. I wish I knew as much about
these critters as y'all do.
<Oh! You could... with study, time... application. Great to have a
tool such as the Net for all to share what they "know" as
useful, pertinent...>
I wont bug you again with such common sense questions.
Thank you again for your time and patience.
<Not a bother. BobF>
Florida Gar and Pleco, comp., nutr. of Loricariids
7/24/08 Hi all-- I love your site, and have spent many hours
reading in the last few months since I discovered it. However,
I've had an issue come up that I have not been able to find
an answer to. I have a seven-inch Florida Gar in a 125 gallon
tank, with six larger-sized silver dollars and a Pleco. I am not
sure of what type he is, but he is definitely not the
"common type". He is brown, with a short, wide, compact
body, about seven or eight inches long. <Do bear in mind some
of these fish will get extremely large; Gar will exceed 60 cm and
potentially 90 cm in captivity if they are among the common
species traded, such as Lepisosteus platyrhincus, the species
usually sold as the "Florida Gar".> Lately, we have
noticed him interacting with the gar in a way we had not
previously observed. He appears to be sucking on the gar. I know
from reading your site and others that this is a bad, bad thing.
<Has been reported between these species, and yes, is damaging
to the Gar. When the skin is abraded, the mucous is lost and it
becomes much easier for secondary infections to get started.>
We chase him away and offer algae disks, which he goes for
(lately, he's seemed overly ravenous, often eating four times
the amount of disks that he used to). <People tend to
underfeed Loricariidae. Understand this: they are constant
grazers and mud sifters in the wild, and don't understand the
"two meals per day" notion many aquarists prefer. You
need to give them vegetable foods such as courgette, sweet potato
or carrot that they can nibble on through the day, plus bogwood
for fibre.> My question is this: is the Pleco suffering from
some type of nutritional imbalance that we can remedy? <Likely
not an imbalance, but quite probably not enough fibre, so that
the fish feels hungry because it isn't full. These catfish
are adapted to feeding on a bulky rather than concentrated
diet.> If he's just being rude, and that's definitely
possible, we can take him to the LFS. However, due to their lack
of adequate space for larger fishes, and the fact that hideously
overprice any fish that aren't tetras or mollies, therefore
forcing the fish to be there in less than ideal conditions for a
long period of time, I fear for his life. This would be a last
resort. Please help! Thanks. --Melinda <Seemingly no simple
answers here, but very likely these fish will need to be
separated. Perhaps try offering a better (more vegetable-rich)
diet, but if that doesn't help, you will need to rehome one
or other fish. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: My Florida Gar and his Pleco Friend, comp., fdg. -- to
Neale 8/9/08 Hi Neale-- Melinda here again. <Hello!>
You responded to my email a few weeks ago regarding our Pleco
(have since found out he is a rhino Pleco) and our Florida gar.
<Hmm... Pterygoplichthys scrophus, rather a nice catfish! Not
common in the trade, and I think quite a handsome beast.> The
Pleco was getting a little too friendly with Fluffy (the gar),
and seemed to be trying to snack on him. <Can happen; not
commonly, but does happen.> You suggested feeding a variety of
fiber-rich veggies, but predicted we'd eventually need to
separate the two. Well, Dino (the Pleco) had no intentions of
eating any of my tasty veggie offerings. In any case, we have
separated them. <Let's see if this helps. If not, then
back to the drawing board. I suppose you could try offering her
some meaty food. My Panaque is ostensibly a vegetarian, but she
enjoys raw mussels in the half shell, partially shelled shrimp
and other such delicacies. You may be able to tempt your cat to
eat these things instead of her tankmates...> Thank you for
your advice. --Melinda <Good luck! Neale.>
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Common Pleco in a planted tank...... 6/30/08 Hey
there, Quick question....can I put a common Pleco in a 150
planted tank? By common, I am referring to Pterygoplichthys
pardalis. I am working on a 3D background, etc, and plan on
having various plants growing along the back wall
space-in-creation. The bottom/mid level will house various shapes
of large driftwood protruding from the "river
bank"....the very bottom will have various boulders, gravel,
and large driftwood. I am worried about a Plec eating plants and
disrupting their locale. That is the common complaint that
I've found on chat boards and bio-pages. However, more than
once I have read of the "exception". So I am confused
and looking for a blunt opinion in plain English. I have one
that's about 8 or 9 inches currently living in a bucket. (It
would be funny if I stopped this email right there, eh?) He was
in a 55......I parted that tank out. Had him in a 20 temporarily.
I also parted out my 150 reef and moved that in a 55 high current
reef......planned on getting a couple of large freshies to put in
the 150.......after 12 hours of moving the 150 inhabitants I went
on the back porch to have a beer. I heard a loud *!Crack!*.......
the 20 gallon, sitting on the counter with the tiniest little
nick in the corner glass finally gave way (had been running for
over 2 years). I chugged my beer laughing. All fish were saved
(Plec and some baby Cichlids that showed up one day in another
tank).....and they all now live in a 5 gallon bucket. The
cichlids are going to a different tank...... Well, my neighbor
has a gnarly fresh water planted tank and he turned me on to the
idea of that rather than a couple of big meanies. So....... Can
this Plec go in the planted tank? (Could have started and ended
this whole damn email with that one sentence!) Thanks in advance
for the info. It's funny that sometimes the simplest answers
to the simplest questions are the hardest to find. I've
searched everywhere!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Jon <Hello Jon.
The short answer is that Pterygoplichthys spp. tend not to eat
plants directly, being omnivores with a preference for algae and
benthic invertebrates such as bloodworms. This contrasts with,
for example, Panaque spp. that are almost entirely herbivorous
and feed on plants and wood rather than algae. However, this
distinction is somewhat academic, because large Plecs can and
will uproot or otherwise damage all but the most sturdy plants.
They swim like bricks, as you probably realise, and don't so
much avoid plants and bulldoze through them. In the process they
will uproot small plants and break the leaves off bigger plants.
They also like to burrow, and this sand or gravel shifting can
easily end up smothering plants. Finally, they have rasping teeth
that can damage soft-leaved and waxy-leaved plants in the process
of their grazing on algae. The best plants for tanks with Plecs
are robust but flexible and fast-growing species, such as Giant
Vallisneria. Java Fern can work well too, partly because it is
tough, but also because it doesn't need to be planted in the
substrate, so isn't uprooted or smothered easily. Anubias
might work well, though when kept with Panaque it ends up being
reduced to a Swiss Cheese Plant, so I'd not necessarily
recommend it. I'd also mention the fact Panaque destroy
painted polystyrene/resin backdrops that go inside the tank;
Pterygoplichthys may be different (it has less robust teeth) but
I wouldn't bank on it! Bottom line, large Loricariid catfish
generally do best in rocky tanks with bogwood and Java Ferns
where they can't do too much damage! Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Common Pleco in a planted tank...... -
7/1/08 Thanks Neale, I was thinking along the same lines as
your "bulldozer" idea, regarding the Pleco in a planted
tank, the more that I thought about it today. I am thinking that
with the setup that I will be having, smaller cleaners are
definitely the way to go here. I have to set up another rocky
tank anyways. He can stay in that bucket for a bit longer. Thanks
for the info and thoughts on the subject! Jon <Hi Jon. For
planted tanks, your best bets on the algae-eater front are
invertebrates, in particular Nerite snails and algae-eating
shrimps such as Neocaridina spp. If you want to supplement these
with fish, then go with small Ancistrus spp./Crossocheilus spp.
as grazers and perhaps Jordanella floridae for thread algae
control. That said, invertebrates on their own do a much better
job when used in sufficient numbers. For example, I'd reckon
on at least 4 Nerite snails plus 10 Cherry Shrimps per 30-40
litres. Cheers, Neale>
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Crab Eating Plec or is it Plec Eating Crab? -
10/21/2006 I have a rather large common-sail fin cross Pleco that
is showing signs of discoloration and his armor it starting to stick
out. I have tried krill shrimp to boost his color I have treated with a
medication made for many illnesses including parasites and scaling. I
even tried feeding him algae wafers. I am all out of options. I have
seen that one of my fiddlers is missing can a Pleco eat a fiddler by
accident if so can this make him sick? He is a male. I was also
wondering if I need to get him a mate or another larger Pleco. I have
tiny tot the baby Pleco, it is the same breed as he is, which by the
way is fat and happy. I did put my Bettas in the tank with him while I
cleaned their tank and the female is a bit more aggressive than the
male which made them chase each other and the female beta did challenge
big boy. Could they of stressed him out? I feel I am running out of
options he's not even full growth potential yet, he's supposed
to get up to 18 inches and he's only 10 could it be old age he is a
rescue fish from a lady that didn't want him anymore. Do I need to
get him more tank mates? Please help in stuck up the creek without a
paddle... and need as much help as I can get. <It may be that a bit
of crab shell is the underlying problem. Bloating is usually caused by
either constipation or an infection. If this is a blockage, and
he's still eating, you can try some fresh or frozen veggies.
Shelled raw peas work well to get things moving. If he's not eating
you can try adding Epsom Salt to his water. One heaping tablespoon per
5 gallons of water. For an internal infection medicated flake is called
for. But only if he's eating. Internal infections that progress to
a point where the fish is not eating are very difficult to treat. In
that case your best chance is keeping his water pristine with very
frequent (daily), and very large (50%), water changes and crossing your
fingers that his immune system will kick the bug. I doubt a three inch
Betta stressed out a ten inch Pleco. Also, there are no crabs that can
live a full life in freshwater. So no more crabs, OK?
Don> This is the edited copy I am sorry I sent it before
I checked last time I hope this is better on your eyes. <Thank
you!>
Subject: leopard Pleco and royal Pleco best friends? Hello me
again. I am setting up a new 110 gallon tank and was wondering if I
could put a leopard Pleco (Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps) and
a royal Pleco (Panaque nigrolineatus) could be put together in
the same tank because I know Plecos belonging to the subfamily Panaque
are aggressive to each other. <Mmm, am inclined to dissuade you from
this mix... but actually don't know how well these two Loricariids
would get along... In all the years I retailed the more popular Panaque
we kept them one to a tank as adults... If the system were big enough I
guess you could try them together... observe if there is much negative
interaction... I doubt if there would be much damage with these highly
armored cats in a short trial. Bob Fenner>
Plecos and Goldfish Hi, I was just given a 12" Pleco
that had outgrown it's tank. After three days I noticed it was
trailing long ropelike poop. Is this normal? If not what is the cause
and what should I do? < This is normal for large algae eating Plecos
and requires no attention> Also, I have several large goldfish. Are
there any problems keeping them together? < Your Pleco comes from
South America were the water is soft , acidic and warm (80+). Your gold
fish like cooler water below 70. So if you try and keep it around 75
they will survive but may not thrive. If either becomes ill then you
may have to place them in their own tanks with either warmer or cooler
water depending on the species.-Chuck> Doug
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