FAQs on
Black Ghost
Knifefish, Apteronotus (Sternarchus) albifrons,
Behavior
Related Articles: New
World Knifefishes, Gymnarchus, Notopterids/Clown
Knifefishes, Electrogenic Fishes,
Related FAQs: Knifefish
Behavior, BGK FAQs 1, BGK FAQs
2, & FAQs on:
BGK ID, BGK
Compatibility, BGK Selection,
BGK Systems, BGK
Feeding, BGK Disease, BGK Reproduction, & Knifefishes 1, Knifefishes 2, Knifefish Identification, Knifefish Behavior, Knifefish Compatibility, Knifefish Selection, Knifefish Systems, Knifefish Feeding, Knifefish Disease, Knifefish Reproduction, Electrogenic Fishes, Notopterid Knifefishes
(Clowns...),
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black ghost knife
fish, hlth./beh. 11/15/11
My black ghost knife fish has been happily living in my tank af 2
years.
The other day he started twirling in a vertical
stance. Days later he is still in a vertical position. It is
as if his floating bladder is haywire. He can't go lay on the
bottom as normal and I don't think he can get anything to eat.
Is there any hope or treatment? Or is he going to starve to death? Any
cure for the unbalance?
thanks for any help,
<Need some information on his aquarium, Jerome. For example, how big
is the tank? What is the water chemistry and temperature? What are the
water quality statistics? Have you used any medication recently? This
sort of "twirling" usually means two things: an acute
reaction to some poison in the water (e.g., copper, formalin, ammonia)
or else the fish is so sick it's lost motor control. In the first
scenario, multiple water changes to dilute the toxins can, should help.
In the second scenario, the future is bleak without a good idea of why
the fish is sick. Cheers,
Neale.>
BGK behaviour
change 11/14/11
Hey Crew,
<Dylan>
I've had my Black Ghost Knife (named Spock) for a year now.. Pretty
much exactly..
He/She is my special little buddy.. Currently living in a 55 gallon
cube with 2 Discus, a Bristlenose Cat, an albino Rainbow Shark, a
Pakistani Loach and 3 Clown Loaches.. I control feeding with all of my
fish through hand feeding, they are all very well trained..
<I can imagine so! Otherwise the BGK couldn't be here>
Originally my BGK (Black Ghost Knife) would come to the surface to
feed, but when he moved to a bigger cave in my tank, he would stop
coming - this didn't bother me that much because I can still
hand-feed him/her and even if somebody else feeds, the food seems to
circulate close to his residence so he gets enough to get by! All very
good stuff..
<Mmm, I'd be making/using a "feeding tool" of some
sort, to deliver foods down/next to the cave opening>
I've started observing him more & more at night enjoying
watching him explore the tank during his time of the day (or night in
this case)..
However, today... during the middle of the day, with ALL the lights on
- Spock is head up on the surface skimming the surface.. He (I'm
not sur on it's gender as of yet, but it's just easier to say
he) is not hungry, as he didn't eat any food I just put in and I do
not think that it is a lack of oxygen because nothing in the tank has
changed.
<Mmm, not too odd behavior. Apteronotids "do" such things
at times>
Other possible reasons that I've ruled out:
- Sickness: Throughout my 1 year of caring for Spock, he hasn't
been sick once and has no evident signs of being sick now (i.e.: no
white spots on body or around gills, no lack of appetite [he ate
yesterday], etc).
- Bullying: Nobody in the tank bothers him.. He is in fact the boss -
nobody is allowed to be in his tunnel, he shoos them away.
- Chemical imbalance: Again, nothing has changed - when I get home
I'm going to do a 10-20% water change.
Any explanations for a complete sudden change in behaviour???
<Maybe a dissolved gas issue; but again, doubtful...
Discus/Symphysodon of size will have more trouble w/ this issue.
Perhaps just a look/see>
Cheers,
Dylan
<And you, Bob Fenner>
Black Ghost Behaving
Oddly... poisoned - 2/9/11
Hi Guys.
<And gals Marcel>
Does anyone know why my Black Ghost is behaving like this? It's
going around and around on broad daylight. Normally it stays hidden in
the plants or under some rock and only comes out when it's dark.
But now, it's going around in circles.
<Sounds like some sort of metal presence... either decor, perhaps
the heater, maybe a thermometer or other ferrous metal in contact w/
the water. This, and/or some other toxin/irritant>
It seems to have a scratch or peeled coating on the side of its
body.
<Bad>
It was recently hit by a bad case of the Ich. It has only been 4 days
since he was cleared of white spots. I treated the white spot breakout
with Mebendazole, Metronidazole, salt and heated water successfully.
The Black Ghost was still healthy after the treatment and then I had a
50% water change and added half a dose of Angel Drops StressOut. And
then it started acting like this.
<... Angel Drops? This line from the PI?: http://geocities.ws/angeldropstrading/
doesn't list ingredients. I would NOT use>
All the other fishes seems to be acting normally. It has been 2 days
since the water change and Black Ghost acting this way. I just made
another 50% water change today.
<I would add carbon>
Watch the video here: http://www.singleshutter.com/index61.htm
Cheers!
Marcel
<And you, Bob Fenner>
Black Ghost Knife fish
and Bichir are lonely 8/18/10
Hi,
I have been investigating your forums and information and I find your
expertise quite useful.
<Only "quite"?>
I have a particular question regarding my current fish tank. I have a
Senegal Bichir (4 in.) and a Black Ghost Knife fish (4.5 in.) in a 30
gal tank, too small for them in the long run for sure, however they are
doing wonderfully right now.
<"For now" being the operating phrase. Whilst the Senegal
Bichir might be kept in a 30 gallon tank indefinitely, the Apteronotus
needs a much larger tank, and soon. Do understand that relatively few
specimens survive into middle age, and they die prematurely PRECISELY
because they're kept in the wrong environment. People promise
themselves they'll buy a bigger tank when the time comes, in
ignorance of the fact Apteronotus come from oxygen-rich, relatively
cool fast-water habitats around rapids and waterfalls. They have very
little tolerance for stagnant water conditions and high nitrate levels.
To keep this species in a tank smaller than 55 gallons is, to be frank,
dangerous.>
The BGK is very active, even during the day, swimming back and fourth
and all over the place especially during feeding times.
<What they do in small tanks.>
The Bichir is the "ruler" of the tank and he goes where he
wants with not much of a care in the world (with the exception of a log
inhabited by the BGK). Right now the tank seems quite sparse for
inhabitants I am looking for possible tank mates that will fit my plans
in the long run.
<Least of your problems. Neither of these species needs tankmates,
and indeed adding catfish or loaches would be foolish. A school of
midwater characins such as Congo Tetras or Bleeding Heart Tetras would
make the most sense.>
I plan on expanding to a 75 gallon tank within the next year or so,
which makes it important that I choose fish that will work together in
a tank of that size. I had a Corydoras Catfish for a while, however I
think that the BGK picked on him too much and the Cory didn't make
it possibly because he was the little one in the tank.
<Correct. Corydoras are inappropriate to this aquarium.>
Currently I am looking at different tank mate possibilities including
an Oscar,
<No. Much too messy. Even in 75 gallons you'd be providing
barely adequate conditions for an Oscar and a Bichir, and the poor
Apteronotus would eventually die from the poor conditions.>
Pleco,
<No. Too much competition for food. Small Loricariids like a
Bristlenose might be okay though.>
Loach,
<There's really no suitable Loach that you'd keep singly.
Most are gregarious, and in sufficient numbers a school of Yo-yo or
Clown Loaches would be far too much competition for the Knifefish and
Bichir.>
or an Angel fish,
<Requires completely different conditions: still water, much
warmer.
Remember, you're keeping Apteronotus albifrons at a MAXIMUM
temperature of 24 C/75 F, and anything warmer will soon kill it. The
Bichir will be fine at that, as will most midwater characins. Likewise,
water turnover needs to be at least 8 times the volume of the tank in
turnover per hour. For a 75 gallon tank, that's 75 x 8 = 600
gallons/hour. That's a big-ass filter, and Angels will not like the
current produced.>
however I am not sure what would work out best and if I could get more
than one of those choices for the tank.
<I think you need to do more reading. Understand virtually everyone
who buys Apteronotus albifrons kills it within a couple of years. When
was the last time you saw a specimen 10 years old and 50 cm/20 inches
long?
Paradoxically, what this species needs to survive is very well known,
and has been for decades. German aquarists for example have maintained
this species for more than 16 years! So why is their track record
elsewhere so dismal? Because people assume they're "community
fish". They are not. They need very specific conditions.>
I would like to have a number of smaller (7-8 in.) fish as opposed to 4
large (over 12 in) fish in one tank, but I am not sure what the best
route is for my tank.
<You certainly could add a school of dither fish like characins that
will encourage both the Bichir and the Knifefish to swim about in the
open.
Surface swimmers like Giant Danios would also be good. Anything else
would be foolish unless chosen extremely carefully. As for catfish,
I'd look at either Ancistrus spp. or small whiptails such as
Rineloricaria that could be kept in small groups without undue
competition. Anything else would be daft.>
Do you have any suggestions on fish species that would work out well
for my situation?
Thanks for any and all help,
Steve
<Hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
Black ghost fish
shyness 1/26/10
Hello Crew, and thank you for the great information you've given me
so far.
<Glad to help.>
(As you probably know by now) I have a 125 US Gallon tank with a
5" Black ghost knife, six silver dollars, a leopard Ctenopoma, two
Botia Kubotai, a large Pleco and two Kuhli loaches. I realize they are
nocturnal, and my black ghost tends to stay inside it's driftwood
most of the daytime, coming out once and a while to move to a new
piece.
<Yes. Quite normal.>
Recently, I have viewed multiple videos showing Black ghost knife fish
swimming around tanks with high lighting, and was wondering if there
was any way to train mine to come out more often?
<Not really. If the fish feels secure, and the aquarium is peaceful
and has lots of shade, and if there are plenty of small dither fish
swimming around the surface, yes, he'll come out. But if the tank
is too rough and tumble for his liking, or if the dither fish are much
bigger than he is, so seem more like predators, and if there's too
much light, then no, he'll hide by day. Simple as that.>
They really are fascinating fish, and I was hoping I could see more of
mine without turning the lights off (plus, feeding with the lights on
is more convenient). Thanks!
<Welcome to the world of nocturnal fish. Some of my catfish take
years to settle down before they risk daytime excursions. Some catfish
never do this, no matter what. Try installing a red or
"moonlight" lamp that comes on at night. Adding more floating
plants instead of bottom plants, and darkening the water using peat
granulate or similar can also help. Cheers,
Neale.>
Listless Black
Ghost Knife 5/10/09
Hi Guys
<Hello,>
I have read through your site (which is fantastic btw) and have been
unable to find anything similar to what I am experiencing.
<Oh?>
I have had 2 black ghost knife fish in a 500 litre tank (with a variety
of other fish, catfish, loaches etc) for about 6 weeks. They are both
around 10cm's and very friendly and social. The other day I noticed
one (Fred) laying totally flat (no movement at all) on the gravel
inside one of the ornaments. I freaked and lifted the ornament thinking
he was dead only to have him swim away and continue behaving normally.
Today he was listless with his tail dragging on the bottom of the tank
and can barely swim at all.
<Do be careful keeping multiple Apteronotus albifrons; like all
electric fish, they tend to "jam" one another when in close
proximity. The dominant specimen actually "bullies" the
weaker specimens, forcing them to use less
favourable frequencies. In extreme situations -- as when you have just
two specimens in a relatively small volume of water -- the dominant
specimen may batter the other specimen to such a degree that it
doesn't feed or act
normally. Now, while I'd expect 500 l (130 US gal.) to be adequate
for two specimens, you never really know for sure. Apteronotus
albifrons is one of those fish best kept either singly or in groups of
six or more specimens,
so that bullying isn't likely going to be a problem.>
I quarantined him straight away and currently have him in a guppy
breeding cage to keep him off the bottom of the tank - he is not moving
at all and I don't know what to do - especially since it is now
8.30 on a Sunday night
so no pet shops open!
<First thing you do is check the water quality and water
chemistry.>
I do about an 80ltr water change every 2-3 weeks and I've checked
the water with a master kit and all of the levels are within good range
with no ammonia or nitrate/nitrite issues.
<Good; also consider oxygenation and possible introduction of copper
(e.g., with medications) or other toxins (e.g., paint fumes) that might
stress these highly sensitive fish.>
They are fed tropical flakes, frozen bloodworms, dried shrimp and a
frozen tropical meat mix - alternated over the week and small amounts a
couple of times a day. Ginger, the other ghostie seems fine, as do the
other fish but
I am very concerned as he has no obvious injuries, no white spots or
coatings and is obviously very sick.
<My gut feeling is this is was initially a social, rather than
environmental, problem, and if you moved to its own tank, the other
specimen would pep up, given good conditions and a healthy diet. But do
consider the other factors mentioned as well.>
Please please help!
Regards,
Marion
<Good luck, Neale.>
Re: Listless
Black Ghost Knife 5/10/09
Hi Neale
<Marion,>
Thank you for responding so quickly.
<No problem.>
Unfortunately he died very shortly after I emailed you. One strange
thing, it appears as those his eyes have disappeared.
<Likely bitten out post-mortem; for whatever reason, these tasty
morsels seem to go first! Eyes are also among the first things damaged
when fish fight, so again, think carefully about social behaviour
issues whenever you
see this symptom.>
There's no wounds around them or anywhere else that I can see. So I
don't know if that's a result of bullying or what they normally
look like once dead?
I will keep a very close eye on the rest of tank over the next couple
of days.
<Wise; would suggest you keep one electric fish per aquarium in
future, unless you have a specifically gregarious species, such as
Eigenmannia, and purchase a school of them (6+) together.>
Thank you very much for your help.
Regards,
Marion
<Cheers, Neale.>
BGK playing
dead? 4/4/09
i
<I>
have had a BGK for almost a month now, introducing it to a tank that
previously and still contains 2 angels and a Pleco...i had a Gourami,
not sure as to what species as i am totally new to this , it
mysteriously
died...maybe overfed cuz it ate EVERYTHING. Then introduced a FW
flounder
<Hard to keep>
4 platies 3 of which were pregnant, and a single Kuhli loach (i know i
need more, but the store i got him from only had 2 and i didn't
know much about them, and they don't get more till this Monday and
they are absolutely awesome fish XD).
<XD?>
Yes i understand the BGK is definitely not a beginner fish, but its
been perfectly normal, and I've learned so much from this
site...only problem I've had with my BGK is its trick which is
discomforting..."playing dead" or taking a nap, this started
just under a week ago and has become more common idk if its a problem
or not i just don't like it. I will live with it if it is not a
problem though. I know it is nocturnal and usually is
seen feeding only at night
<What they do>
and it has a "Ghost house" tube to hide in, but i will move
that out of constant light, another fine fishy fact i learned from your
wonderful FAQs.
He usually eats live brine shrimp and halved cubes of frozen (by the
time i get them to him thawed XD) bloodworms and maybe my first
pregnant platy =/. Unfortunately seeing as this is my first tank the
only info i can give is that it is a 30 gal tank and is usually above
75 F, and usually crystal clear but not so recently. Please respond
with the best of your knowledge as always, Ken
<The "playing dead" behavior is normal for freshwater
Knives... Bob Fenner> Strange BGK behaviour 8/6/08
Hello, I have a young BGK (about 4cm long) that is exhibiting strange
behaviour. I'm Australian, so please forgive my metric
measurements. <Not at all! I for one prefer metric
measurements...> I have a 160L tank, the water temperature is 27
degrees Celsius and the PH is approximately 7.2. <Long term this
tank is way too small for Apteronotus albifrons, though right now
there's no harm, and won't be until the thing gets to around
~20 cm.> There are 8 Neons, one dwarf Gourami, one flame Gourami,
one bristle nose cat fish and two snails. <Hmm... long term the
Neons will of course be at risk of being eaten...> The knife fish
appears to be rubbing itself against objects such as flat rocks and
plants in what I would describe as a fish that appears to be infected
with Ichthyophthirius multifilius. <Certainly possible, especially
if new fish have been added to the system. Treating with heat/salt
isn't a bad idea (raise the temp to ~28-30 to speed up the life
cycle, and raise salinity to 1 gramme salt/litre, though add the salty
water in stages across a few days so as not to shock the fish.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwich.htm Apteronotus
albifrons is sensitive to some medications, so I wouldn't
necessarily go with standard copper/formalin treatments.> However,
there are no physical manifestations of this disease and the fish has a
healthy appetite for it's diet of blood worms and does not show any
other signs of weakness, immobility or discolouration. <Sometimes
Ick and Velvet go for the gills before the skin/fins, so not seeing the
white spots doesn't always mean much. Still, if the fish is
infected you should see the white spots appearing eventually. The salt
treatment won't do any harm. I'd also check the water
quality/chemistry -- fish "flash" when irritated by
ammonia/nitrite/pH changes, and Apteronotus is much more sensitive than
the other species you have. If the other fish don't show any
symptoms that would suggest Ick or velvet, I'd definitely be
worrying about environmental issues.> All other fish appear healthy,
happy and disease free. I owned a BGK about 7 years ago, but I do not
recall it behaving in this manner. Any advice would be appreciated. I
hope I'm not being too paranoid. <Ah, no, paranoia with this
species is well placed. Extremely sensitive, and one of the more
difficult to keep fish in the hobby.> Thanking you in advance,
Janine <Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Strange BGK
behaviour 8/6/08 Hi Neale, <Janine,> Thank you
very much for your advice and quick reply. I was thinking about
initiating the salt/heat treatment as I don't like introducing
chemicals, but I have never done this before so I wasn't really
sure how to go about it. Hopefully I've caught it early enough.
<Fingers crossed!> Thanks again, Janine. <Most welcome.
Cheers, Neale.>
Ghost
knife, BGK beh., sys. 3/3/08 I have had a 40
gallon freshwater aquarium for several years, and until recently the
tank was home to a few Oscars who eventually out grew the tank and now
reside in a friend's outdoor Koi pond. This past Christmas 12/07 we
decided to re-establish the tank with two silver dollars and one
incredibly elusive ghost knife. The tank contains your basic under
gravel filter, bio wheel, plenty of colorful plastic plants and a long
plastic tube, guess who lives in the tube. When I purchased the ghost
knife from the pet store he was in a tank with several other ghost
knifes and no real shelter, he was swimming around the tank, front
wards, backwards and performing all sorts of tricks. Now that the ghost
knife has a place to hide he never comes out of his tube. I love to
tell friends about this mysterious looking fish, however when they ask
to see him I can only reply with ummm sorry he's still hiding. Any
suggestions on how my ghost knife can overcome his shyness?
<Apteronotus is only active in dark, shady aquaria. You need a soft
substrate for digging, lots of rocks, and real or plastic plants that
reach up to the surface of the aquarium and produce lots of shade. Use
LOTS of floating plants (Indian Fern is ideal). What you do not want is
brightly coloured gravel, bizarrely coloured plants, or bright light.
Sounds and vibrations must be minimised, so don't put the tank near
slamming doors or loud TV sets. Bob F just wrote a piece on setting up
an African-themed aquarium, and the photo of the tank shown there is
precisely what you need for Apteronotus, so have a read:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwlvstksel.htm Apteronotus
live in major river systems and expect excellent water quality and lots
of water movement. I'd be aiming for NOT LESS than 6 times the
volume of the tank in turnover per hour. These are NOT easy fish to
keep, and when kept poorly become shy, and often die.> I also wanted
to know if adding aquarium salt when doing water changes was harmful to
the ghost knife? <Yes.> I know with other fish that I have had, I
have added approximately 1 teaspoon of aquarium salt for every 10
gallons, however I recently read that ghost knifes are not particularly
found of chemicals such as prime coat and aquarium salt. <Indeed.
The addition of Prime Coat and aquarium salt is unnecessary in a
properly run aquarium. Instead focus on filtration and water quality.
50% weekly water changes and nitrates below 20 mg/l, and of course zero
ammonia and nitrite, are what you are aiming for. Cheers,
Neale.>
Freshwater fish
electro-sense question I recently bought an elephant fish. today my
girlfriend surprised me with a black ghost knife. They are both about
3in and are in a 34 gallon tank with separate very good hiding spots.
Will there 'electro-senses' clash? <There have been some
studies on these electromagnetic fields generated by these fish but not
much in the popular aquarium literature. But I am sure that they are
aware of each other.> also how sensitive are they to salt? <These
fish come from clean warm acidic water and have become very sensitive
to salt.-Chuck> I use a little less then the recommended dose of
aquarium salt(1tbsp per 5 gallon). tank also includes 6 glass cats and
a blue lobster. thanks for your time. -Zac
Ghost Knife Turned cream I have had my beautiful Ghost for
over 8 months. He's only about 5 inches
long. Recently I have noticed, that he has turned a
very pale shade of light tan. <be sure to check to see if his
skin is turning the color, or does it appear to have a
"dust" like coloration to his body. It might
be Oodinium (otherwise known as velvet). The visible symptom of
this disease is a fine grey-gold to whitish 'dust' on the
body of the fish. Fish will usually show very rapid
gill movement during this time. The disease is caused by a
protozoan parasite, and may be triggered by exposure to ammonia
and nitrite, or excessive nitrate levels. That is if
it appears to be something on the skin. I've never
heard of a ghost changing his color before. Have you
checked his water parameters lately? Make sure that
the ammonia levels aren't that high. and be sure
to keep up on the water changes. If the fish isn't
showing any signs of stress or sickness then I'm not sure
what is the best course of action to take. I
wouldn't want to add a medicine to the water and stress it
out if it's not needed.> Nothing has changed in the
tank-no new fish added, etc., so I don't know why he would be
stressed. He still bobs to the top to
eat. Have you ever heard of this? <I haven't
heard of this happening with a ghost knife, I would keep a close
eye on him and make sure if you start to see any problems, or if
the fish starts rubbing itself on objects in the tank to move it
to another tank and start medicating it accordingly.> Ren in
Montana <Good Luck with the fish. -Magnus>
Off-colored Ghost Knife and Oscars with Angels -
02/22/2004 Magnus... <Sabrina, today, hope all is well>
Thought I would update you on my ghost who lost his color. I put
him in my 5gal guppies tank. Thought that would be
best - no one to intimidate him. Of course, he loved
the old car for his home, and as expected, the baby guppies all
disappeared. Had to make a decision of sacrifice to
hopefully keep him alive. I noticed a bit of black
coming back (due to fresh "sea food" I'm sure...),
<And you'll surely have more baby guppies in the future,
no worries. Good that they have contributed to your
ghost's well-being, a worthy cause, IMO.> but he has
outgrown the little tank, <Heh, to be expected!> so I moved
him to the 38gal. This tank consists of Parrots, Tiger
Barbs, and a handful of misc. The red tail shark is
probably the most aggressive, but lives in harmony with the
others usually. Once in awhile he'll chase the
barbs around. So far the ghost has found an ornament
to hide in and seems to being doing okay. <IMO, all of these
are too aggressive as tank mates - do keep an eye on him, watch
closely for splits in his fins or any other signs of
distress.> Another question....I have a 60gal octagon with two
Oscars, two tins, <Hmm? Ahh, tinfoil barbs,
yes?> two fire mouth cichlids and two angels and a silver
dollar. All is well with the combination at this
point, but as the Oscars grow (one is about 6"), do you
think the angels will be okay? <Not at all, not in
this size/shape tank - I would consider all tankmates grossly at
risk of harassing/harming one another as they "grow up"
- the Oscars will likely require a tank of their own, if
they're getting on well, they've likely
paired. Removing them to their own space will give you
some wiggle room for the rest, and the Tinfoils are the next
biggest worry - topping out at about fourteen
inches. Fortunately, they are durable, and slow
growers - I would remove them with the Oscars. A tank
that is big on surface area (er, not a hex/octagon/tall tank)
will do best for the four.> One angel is quite large, the
other only about 2 1/2 inches. I know there is not
always a rule to go by, but do you think I should move the
angels? <The Oscars and Tinfoils will need a larger tank in
the long run.... not so much larger in gallonage as in usable
space.> FYI-my "herd" has gone down in
numbers. I have been very blessed to have had 6
adoptions in the past two weeks. <Wonderful!!>
Down to 13 dogs-seems so quiet. <Sounds like
you're doing quite well.> Thumbs up to your girlfriend for
helping the shelters and rescues-wish she was here! Have a
wonderful day. Ren <You, too. Wishing
you well, -Sabrina>
|
Black Ghost Knife
habits Good day, I am writing to ask about the black ghost's
behavior. I notice that sometimes it lays on its side in the Mondo
grass I have in my tank. Is it
'sleeping'? Or is it sick? I have never
had a black ghost until my brother bought one for my birthday the other
day. any answers would be appreciated. < The black ghost is really a
cool fish. Unfortunately it is nocturnal and is rarely seen during
daylight hours. If you really want to see him out and about then you
can turn off the aquarium light and feed the tank some black worms or
live brine shrimp. Just use the room light to watch him. In bright
light they will hide in logs or caves until dusk when they come out to
feed. They get big, up to 18 inches but got to be up there as one of
the strangest aquarium fish.-Chuck> Thank you!
Eric
Training a black
ghost knife fish 9/22/05 Dear Mr. Fenner, I have a
black ghost knife fish that I have had for a month. He is
now about 7" long and very healthy. He eats flakes
in the morning and at night, occasionally I give him some
freeze-dried Tubifex worms. What I would like to
know is how you teach them to eat out of your hand. He seems to
be a smart one he figured out the flakes were edible on his
own. If you know how to do this I would really
appreciate it. Thanks for your help, MDM <Try feeding
small amounts of meatier foods, more frequently, particularly just with
some light on outside the tank (not in... too bright). Takes time,
patience. Bob Fenner>
FW algae and Apteronotus skin Hi, In my 29 gallon tank there
are re-brownish specs on everything. My water parameters are fine and I
do weekly water changes and cleaning. what do you think it is?
<Almost undoubtedly algal colonies... take a read on WWM re> Also
I have a Black Ghost Knife for about 10 months now and since November
he has shown a weird green/brown gel-like coating over him. I thought
it was ick but wouldn't have died by now if that was the case. Do
you know what it is and how to treat it? thanks. <This is probably
the animals skin itself... and your good vision. The species is
"quite slimy" in good health. Bob Fenner>
FW algae and Apteronotus skin, II Bob, thank you for the
response I just wanted to add that my knifefish's slime is a little
whitish-gray when the aquarium light is on, does that make a
difference? <Actually, yes... as stated, you have excellent vision,
observation> I mean when I go to the pet shop all the ones are pure
jet black. Jahner <These are more stressed... Bob Fenner>
BGK suddenly shy 11/12/07 Hello Crew,
I've had a BGK for 8 months now. He lives in a 55 gallon tank with
2 clown loaches, 3 discus, 2 rams, and a golden nugget Plec, with loads
and loads of plants. I do weekly water changes, and water conditions
are almost perfect. ammonia 0, nitrite 0, nitrate trace. People always
comment on how crystal clear my water looks. He's been very healthy
and happy, and growing slowly. There are several hiding places for him
but he has taken up home with the 2 clown loaches in a black tube.
<Predictably> The three of them swim about looking for food
during the day as well as when the lights go out. As soon as I drop
food in, those three are the first on the scene playing with each other
and eating as fast as they can, its so cute to watch. <Ditto> But
in the last 3 weeks or so, the BGK has stopped coming out. He just
stays in the tube wiggling about. At feeding time only the loaches come
out. I'm very careful with over feeding so the food I put in is
always all gone within ten minutes. So I'm 99.9% sure the BGK
hasn't eaten in 3 weeks!! <Mmm, is eating something,
assuredly... Perhaps you have other food... live worms and such, living
in the gravel at this point> Is it normal for these fish to suddenly
change their behavior? <Does happen> Today, I fed my discus live
bloodworm as a treat, one worm landed in front of the hiding tube and
the BGK stuck his head out ate it and went back in. My question is, how
could a friendly full of life BGK suddenly become a scaredy cat? there
has been no changes, no new tank mates, no change in feeding schedules.
My tank is always in view, and he never comes out, day or night. Can
there be a chance of illness with him? What can I do? thanking you in
advanced Freddie <If I had to guess... I'd say that the most
likely possibility is that your Discus are getting larger, perhaps
showing a bit of aggression toward this Apteronotid... Do try to spend
a bit more time in front of the tank to observe... If two do pair off,
there may be trouble for all the other fishes here. I might try some
cultured black worms (Tubificids) to urge this Knife's return to
feeding. Bob Fenner>
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