FAQs on
Black Ghost
Knifefish, Apteronotus (Sternarchus) albifrons,
Systems
Related Articles: New
World Knifefishes, Gymnarchus, Notopterids/Clown
Knifefishes, Electrogenic Fishes,
Related FAQs: Knifefish
Systems, BGK FAQs 1, BGK FAQs
2, & FAQs on:
BGK ID, BGK
Behavior, BGK Compatibility,
BGK Selection, BGK
Feeding, BGK Disease, BGK Reproduction, & Knifefishes 1, Knifefishes 2, Knifefish Identification, Knifefish Behavior, Knifefish Compatibility, Knifefish Selection, Knifefish Feeding, Knifefish Disease, Knifefish Reproduction, Electrogenic Fishes, Notopterid Knifefishes
(Clowns...),
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Would you settle an argument and maybe save a Black Ghost
Knifefish's Life; filtr. 3/25/17
<Sure>
I have a friend who has a 72 bow front. It is
completely empty and he wants to get a BGK to be the solitary fish in
the tank. His set up is perfect (according to what I've read on these
fish, I've never owned one) except for one thing - filtration. I've
repeatedly shown him the WWM postings that state that these fish need a
high water flow - as much as 8 - 10 times tank capacity every hour, but
he insists that is only for adults; that a juvenile will do fine
in the 72 with his Cascade 1000 (I think the gph for that model
is around 267 gallons per hour) until it has matured. He believes that a
higher gph rate would leave a juvenile plastered up against the side of
the tank. He has agreed to abide by your response to this post.
<The Cascade won't do... the ratings for power filters are generally way
off in terms of what they really deliver. He'd need three-four of these
hang-ons to move enough water, provide biological filtration. Perhaps
adding a large canister filter in addition. Bob Fenner>
*Renee *
Re: Black ghost knife - quarantine and tank mates. Water
quality/sys. 11/18/16
Hello again,
I finally got the GH and kH test kit, my readings are:
tap water GH - 11 drops, hence 11 degree about 200 ppm
tap water kH - 6 drops, hence 6 degrees about 100 ppm
the drinking water dGH is about 3 degrees 50 ppm
The tank dGH is about 8 degrees, so I'm guessing it should be fine and I
don't have to mess with water chemistry. Now ill just have to wait and
get the fish :) I cannot thank you enough for responding to all the
e-mails even if they're silly. Thank you ! You've been a life saver.
<Thanks for the kind words, and I agree, your water chemistry sounds
fine for Black Ghost Knifefish. As we've discussed before, water quality
and oxygenation are more important. Good luck, Neale.>
Re: Black ghost knife - quarantine and tank mates. Now feeding, avoiding
B vitamin deficiency 11/18/16
hello,
I was just going through your article on Thiaminase and vitamin B1
deficiency in fish. As this is important, I was looking into foods that
are rich in this to form a varied diet for the BGK. and I wasn't sure if
some of these foods can be fed to these fish Hikari pellets, earthworms,
cucumber, beef heart, shrimp, green peas and tilapia fish fillet in
general
<These are all good. Beef heart should be used sparingly, as it is quite
rich, but is a classic "safe" food for aquarium fish because it isn't
fatty.>
foods that I came across is rich in Thiamine are - mackerel,
<Sparingly. Good in terms of health. But oily, so makes a BIG mess. I've
used mackerel on the day I do a water change, so I can change the water
after the fish have eaten it up. Make sense?>
lean pork (can pork be fed for fish? I'm a vegetarian so I'm not sure
about how meat works except that I need to take off all the fat from it
first) ,
<No, don't feed pork to fish.>
squash,
<Yes.>
liver (chicken or pork),
<No.>
pistachio,
<Unlikely to be eaten, but tiny bits might be eaten by some herbivorous
fish. I doubt Black Ghosts will eat it though.>
wheat bread
<Very occasionally to herbivorous fish does no harm. But nutritionally
not particularly useful because most fish don't naturally consume
starch.>
and yeast.
<No.>
If this doesn't work out, can I use vitamin b1 supplements meant for
humans?
<Theoretically, but getting the dose right will be difficult. Normally
freshwater fish don't need vitamin supplements. Just offer a nice varied
diet.>
same for erythromycin cause its difficult to get hands on API here in
India.
<Understood. But again, dosing is difficult, so unless a vet can help
you, best avoided.>
Also, will fluctuations in dGH have the same affect as ph ? cause' my
tank dGH had lowered to 8 from 11 in 3-4 days.
<General hardness shouldn't normally vary much, if at all. If it does,
then the best approach is to do small, frequent water changes to "reset"
it. Say, 10-15% every couple of days.>
Thank you in advance. Sorry about asking too many questions !
<Most welcome. Neale.>
Black Ghost... conspec. comp. 4/18/16
Hi i have my BG 2 years now, he or she is like 8 inches now, my question can i
add another one to the tank with my BG or not? and if yes how old or measure
needs to have to be tolerant to each other? thanks for any info..Eddie Rodriguez
;-)
<Not likely a good idea. Read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/bgkcomp.htm
Bob Fenner>
re: Black Ghost... Now green algae; not using WWM 4/18/16
Ok perfect, that means no....thanks...also do you know if it's OK that
green algae I think it is growing on the glass tank, so i cleaned but is hard to
get it out and grows again don't know what to do to clean it or if is ok to have
it?
<Please learn to/use WWM; as some 30,000 others do daily... the search
tool, indices....
READ here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwalgcontrol.htm
and the files linked above>
And if you can tell me what other fishes I can add to the tank that he
is not going to be stressful, I know they has to be bigger than him or her but I
mean what kinds? Thank you so much for responding and sorry to bother :-)
<.... read where I last referred you. BobF>
Black Ghost knife; env. poisoning: Too much new water
12/27/15
Hello, I have a ghost knife approx. 30cm living in a clear Perspex tube in my
communal tank. Recently I changed 80% of the water ,
<Yikes; do see/read my piece on WWM re "frequent partial water changes". In
these years, I would only change out about a quarter of the water... for reasons
stated>
cleaned the filters and re stabilised the conditions. Whilst I was doing this I
removed the ghost knife into a container on his own. All ok . Three hours later
I put him back in the tank and now he seems to be having trouble remaining the
right way up. He is upside most of the time. He still eats and can get upright
for this but then moves into the upside down position. I have fed him shelled
green peas which he likes but he still is swimming upside down in his tube for
five days now. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Thank you .
Sincerely Helen and “Phantom”
<Am out of the country; but will look for you:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/fwh2ochgs.htm
and the linked files above. I WOULD try overdosing (two, three times the amount)
w/ Amquel or equivalent product. Going forward, store and pre-treat the 20-25%
of water to be changed out ahead of time (like a week).
Bob Fenner>
Tank
10/11/15
Hello. Would a black ghost knife fish do well In a 45 or 70 gallon tank.
<Mmm; yes>
I want the coolest fish I can but I don't know which size I'm getting yet.
I also like discus, Amazon puffers, dwarf gourami, and yoyo loach. What would u
recommend on this. Also what kind of filter, heating, decor, substrate,
and other tools do u recommend. I only have a 5 gallon now and really
need to upgrade. Thank you
-Michael
<.... Please learn to/use WWM. READ here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/bgksys.htm
and the linked files above. Bob Fenner>
Re: Black ghost knife sick (Bob, any other ideas?) Sys.
3/12/13
Hi Bob,
What is your opinion on using sand for substrate for my black ghost
knife?
<Is fine as long as not too fine (grade-wise)... creating
maintenance/mulm-detritus accumulation issues. Oh, and do check/see that
it's not too alkaline... lest the pH be driven too high for
Apteronotids. BobF>
Apteronotus River
Tank? 3/15/12
Hello, I have two tanks that have been set up for about a year,
currently a
10 gallon that I started with and a 30 gallon that now house's two
fancy Guppy's (1 1/2 each) an Algae eater (2 Inch
<Is this... Gyrinocheilus? If so, see WWM re, and get rid of
it>
) and one long fin zebra Danio
(2 Inches) and very recently a Black Ghost Knife fish (4 inches) he has
started eating out of my hand and I must say it is by far the most
amazing thing I've seen any of my fish do! All of the readings are
perfect in the tank and the water is crystal clear with a very high
water turn over rate so he should be fine till his new home is set up,
(nitrate 0, Ammonia 0, and PH-7, plus weakly water changes). I
know this tank is far to<o> small for him and I am currently in
the process of setting up a new tank, (55 gallons (still to small for
the long run but eventually I plan on getting 75 gallon + tank in a few
years) that I intend to make a river tank that will have a one
directional flow ( two powerheads with two returns on the opposite side
of the tank to keep the water flowing in one direction.)
My question is this, would my BGK thrive in this
environment?
<Mmm, the current? Yes>
I know they come from rivers, and waterfall pools in the Amazon
and like a high turn over rate in a tank, but would they be happy in my
purposed simulated environment?
<Likely so>
My next question is one of tank mates, I would
like to get a verity
<variety>
of loaches for this river tank, including clown (possibly 2?) Botia
almorhae, (2-3?) and preferably some Beaufortia kweichowensis
(butterfly Hillstream loaches) are these compatibly tank mates? and
most importantly would my BGK eat them?
<It will not; though may be bothered/pestered by their swimming
about>
My final question would be what to make the
substrate in the tank if this is a possible set up? I know Loaches like
to dig and have very sensitive barbels but would it be alright to lay
smooth river pebbles for the base of the tank?
<Finer natural gravel would be better. Please read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/bgksys.htm
( I need something to cover up the piping for the river systems
powerheads and returns so I do not think sand will work but again I may
be wrong.) I plan on putting drift wood and various caves for the
loaches and BGK to hind <hide> in, out of the current and was
wondering what type of plants would be good for the surface since most
of the spices here are nocturnal?
<My fave: Ceratopteris>
I'm fond of the idea of lily pads yes? no?
<Possibly... but not Nymphaea...>
Any help you can offer would be GREATLY appreciated as I
really want this tank set up to work but if it can't then I'd
rather know that before sacrificing these amazing species for my
amusement. Thanks again!
<Welcome. Bob
Fenner>
BGK and blasting
sand 3/5/12
Greetings!
Excellent and very informative operation you folks have here, thank you
for taking your time to do this.
I have one quick question...
Do you think that the magnetic nature of some blasting sands (for
example: Black Beauty sold at Tractor Supply) could wreck havoc upon
the "electronics" of a BGK?
- Chris
<Yes; I do think ferrous materials, any sort of strong/detectable
magnetism in their system can prove problematic for weakly electrogenic
fishes. Bob Fenner, who's 1973 survey piece on this group is
archived on
WWM>
Is this too small for a BGK?
3/4/12
Hi,
I have been running a 2ftx1ftx1ft tank (62 Litres) for about a month. I
have been adding fish to it and now have 2 sucking catfish (4cm ea),
1corydoras (2cm),
<These are social species>
1 molly (4cm), 6 neon tetras,
<These two are not compatible... see re their water conditions on
WWM, books>
and the newest addition, a black ghost knife (approx. 7cm).
<not compatible or a suitable size system for>
I have seen mixed responses online for the size of an appropriate
tank for a BGK, and would like to know if this is
too small. The tank does not seem crowded and the BGK looks comfortable
in its hiding spots and coming out at night. I know that they can grow
quite large but will this sized tank have much of an effect for the
health of the BGK for now? The filter I have turns over 480L/hr and the
tank is regularly cleaned also.
Regards, Mitchell.
<Read; what you have here won't work. Bob
Fenner>
Best option for Black Ghost Knife Fish, sys.
1/19/12
Hello,
<Hi there>
I want to start out by saying that I probably look at your website a
couple times a week. I have had freshwater fish tanks for my
whole life since my dad got me into it as a kid and I just love reading
about all kinds of freshwater fish. So thank you for your very
helpful and informative site.
I am looking to get your thoughts on what would be the best option for
a Black Ghost Knife fish. I have two tanks that I have been
considering putting one in but I have gotten conflicting information
from numerous sites.
I have a 75 gallon that has been set up for about 18 months with
Angels, Discus and Geophagus altifrons (they all get along very
well). Water temp is 81 F, Nitrites 0, ammonia 0, nitrates 10, PH
7. I have a Fluval fx5 for filtration.
<Ok>
I also have a 55 gallon that I built a River Tank Manifold
(http://www.loaches.com/articles/river-tank-manifold-design) cold water
tank. Water temp is currently 70 F, nitrites 0, ammonia 0,
nitrates 5, ph 7. The sponge filters/powerhead system is
currently the only filtration but I am going to be putting in a HOB
filter soon. I have 8 Golden Barbs, 12 white cloud mountain
minnows and 4 Hill Stream Loaches. This one has only been running
for about a year since my wife wouldn't let me build it until I
agreed to keep it in the garage. Its freezing here right now so I
have a Fluval 200 and a 300 heater in there to keep it at a stable
temp.
I have read that they come from fast moving streams near waterfalls
which makes me think it would be great for the 55 gallon but the
temperature might be too low.
<It is>
I can raise the temp if necessary but really just want to know
what would be the best temp for them.
<Better to place the Knife in the 75 if there's room, and leave
the 55 w/ the present inhabitants in the water conditions as they
are>
I have read the max temp for them is 75 but then on other sites
have read a range of 73-82. I know the WCM Minnows would probably
get eaten but I have a friend who would take them if I wanted to move
the BGK into that tank.
On the other hand I read somewhere that someone kept their BGK with
their angels and that intrigued me so I thought that might be an option
in my 75 gal.
<Perhaps... though it may be hard to get food to the animal there,
due to competition>
Anyway any advice would be much appreciated. I am kind of leaning
toward raising the temp in the 55 gallon to about 73, getting rid of
the white cloud mountain minnows and putting the BGK in that one but
want to do what is best...if either is a good option. I also do
not want to risk harm to the hill stream loaches or the barbs. If
not, I don't have to put one in either. ...that just gives me
an excuse to get another tank!
<The best option here>
Thank you for your time.
Adam
<Welcome. Bob Fenner>
BGK
sys. 5/1/11
Hey guys!
Is a 125-150g big enough for my BGK when he is full grown?
Hank
<Should be, but do be aware most casual aquarists kill their Black
Ghosts long before they reach full size (which can take a long time,
ten years perhaps). The usual issues are lack of food, insufficient
oxygen,
excessively warm water, and above all, poor water quality, including
non-zero nitrate levels. At one point scientists were experimenting
with using these electrical fish to monitor water quality -- when water
quality
drops, they become stressed and their electrical field alters in such a
way it can be detected with appropriate sensors. These fish are
incredibly intolerant of the usual conditions offered in community
tanks. Cheers, Neale.>
BGK
sys. 4/26/11
How long can my fish go without filtration and heat? The power
was knocked out around 5am and will be back on around 5pm at
the earliest!!
<Read here: http://wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_5/volume_5_3/power.htm
B>
Re: BGK sys.
Thanks, Bob!! Your info is, as always, both helpful and refreshing!
<Do insulate that tank! And welcome! BobF>
Re: BGK sys.
Okay I will do that. The ambient temperature of the room fluctuates
between 80-75f during the day. Should I still insulate or wait until
tonight when the temp. drops to about 70f in the room?
Hank
<NOW.>
Re: BGK sys. 4/26/11
10-4!!
Additional question... BGK sys.
12/28/10
hi Neale,
Also if I do the 75 or 70 wide could I now entertain the idea of a
Black Ghost Knife?
Phill
<Apteronotus albifrons has very specific needs in terms of water
temperature, water current, and oxygen levels, as well as being
difficult to feed. While 75 gallons would be adequate, please do review
the needs of the BGK prior to purchase to ensure that the conditions
you have in your tank -- and are required by your existing fish --
match those of the Knifefish. The vast majority of BGKs die within a
year of purchase and hardly any reach full size -- and there's a
reason why this is the case. For generic community tanks, the African
Knifefish Xenomystus nigri is generally far easier to keep. Cheers,
Neale.>
New Black ghost knife, comp., sys.
1/15/10
Hi, I have recently purchased a Black ghost knife fish, along with a
Leopard Ctenopoma and six silver dollars from my LFS. They inhabit a
125 gallon (US) tank along with a (more or less) foot long rhino Pleco,
two *Botia Kubotai*, a horse head loach and a Kuhli loach (simply
because I couldn't catch him if my life depended on it).
<Should all work together, though Ctenopoma don't like strong
water currents, whereas loaches and Apteronotus do, so some care will
need to be taken in arranging water currents and resting
places.>
The tank is well cycled (been around for about five years), and I
perform weekly water changes of 40-50%.
<Good.>
I have average Ph, leaning a little bit on the harder side.
<pH and hardness are different things, so don't get them
confused. In any event, this collection of fish will be fine in
slightly basic, moderately hard water (i.e., around pH 7.5, 10-15
degrees dH).>
Everyone is doing quite well, and the Ctenopoma has staked out a
region.
<As is their wont. They do like being close to the surface though,
so tall or floating plants are very beneficial.>
At first, about five hours after purchasing the new fish, I thought the
BGK was dead-- It was laying upside down halfway inside a piece of
driftwood, now moving. The next morning, he's fine, and has decided
to make his home in a piece of driftwood were my Botia Kubotai already
have a territory (he's kicked them out, which I find pretty
amusing).
<Like many electric fish, they seem to "irritate" other
fish with their electric field, and so can bully them somewhat.>
My question is, do I need to feed him exclusively at night, or can I
also feed him in the daytime?
<Initially at night, but once settled and tame, these fish feed
willingly during the daytime.>
And can I simulate night by simply turning off the tank light and then
feeding him?
<Why not try it and see?>
Also, are bloodworms a good choice for my BGK (and the Ctenopoma?).
<Within reason, yes, but they shouldn't be the only food items
because they aren't terribly nutritious. Augment with black
mosquito larvae, brine shrimp, chopped seafood and fish fillet,
earthworms, krill, etc.>
Thanks! -Jack.
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: New Black ghost knife
1/16/10
Water currents aren't a problem, as I have a giant floating mass of
plastic plants up at the top of my tank.
<Cool.>
I think my pH.
<It's lower-case p, capital H, i.e., pH.>
and hardness are more or less what you recommended, so that should be
fine.
<Good.>
After observing the Botia some more, I've found that the Knife fish
and the loaches have started to co-exist in the same piece of
driftwood, though why is beyond me.
<May be fine. I'd add some additional, viable caves to the
system though.
Loaches can be territorial, and their subocular spines can scratch
their enemies. Damage to your Apteronotus should be strongly avoided,
because treatments for Finrot and Fungus can easily kill these
extremely sensitive fish. Very, very few specimens last more than a
year in captivity through poor water quality; lack of oxygen;
overheating; and exposure to copper, formalin, and other such
toxins.>
I purchased a pack of bloodworms from my LFS, (though they were sold
out of everything else-- I got the last package of bloodworms) and plan
to feed it to them, along with a small amount of flake food, bottom
feeder pellets for the loaches, earth worms from a local bait and
tackle shop, and brine shrimp once my local fish store gets some
in.
<Do remember to avoid freeze-dried bloodworms and concentrate on
live or wet-frozen ones, if you use them more than once a week. Used to
excess, these dried foods can cause constipation.>
Thanks for all of the great advice!
-Jack
<Happy to help. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: New Black ghost knife
Thanks for all of the great advice!
<Happy to help.>
The bloodworms I purchased were wet-frozen, and I plan on ordering more
driftwood for my tank. Everyone still seems to be getting along (except
for when my massive Pleco decided that he was going to wedge himself
into the
driftwood that my loaches, knife fish and Kuhli loach were currently
in).
<Hmm, sounds like a grouchy catfish...>
My silver dollars seem to be hiding in the corner of the tank, though,
so I'm wondering if there's anything I can do to get them out
swimming around.
Do you think if I bought a few more (assuming that when they get
larger, they won't be overcrowded) that they
would come out more?
<Probably, yes. Did you say you had a 125 gallon system? You should
certainly keep 6-10 specimens, if that's the case. Silver Dollars
also appreciate some shade, and they do tend to be nervous under bright
light.>
Also, I'm pretty sure my water was a little cool for my fish (71
degrees Fahrenheit), so I purchased another heater and boosted my tank
up to around 78.
<Would nudge that down very slightly, to about 25 C/77 F for optimal
results. Apteronotus and most loaches come from relatively
fast-flowing, oxygen-rich waters and don't like things too
"stuffy".>
Thanks!
<Cheers, Neale.>
Black Ghost Knifefish 9/7/09
Hi,
<Hello there>
My fiancé and I have recently decided to get (back?) into the fish
keeping hobby.
<Like jarheads and bicycle riding; methinks no one ever really
leaves altogether>
Both of our parents have had fish for many years. We have absolutely
fallen in love with Black Ghost Knifefish. We would love to get one. We
will be getting a large (around 90 gallons) aquarium within a month or
two.
This leads me to my question. I have read in several places including
this site, that these fish prefer soft water with a low pH.
<This is so>
Our tap water is EXTREMELY hard, and has a very high pH. The pH is
somewhere between 8.4 and 8.8.
<Wow!>
The hardness of the water tests at least as high as the test strip goes
(300 ppm). (I cleaned our shower head shortly after we moved in, 5
months ago. It is already about half plugged up!) The KH also tests at
least 300
ppm. Buying reverse osmosis water from a fish store is not really an
option, as the closest store is 2.5 hours away.
<Wouldn't do this in any case... Get your own unit and use it
for your petfish and potable (drinking, cooking) needs>
I have read that it is better to allow a fish to adapt to the local
water than try to alter it, causing the levels to fluctuate.
<Not in such extreme cases as yours, no>
But then, I also read that BGK are very sensitive to water conditions
and are not easy fish. I guess my question is, which would be the
lesser of the two evils in this case; trying to 'fix' the water
parameters and
risking fluctuations, or try to have the fish adapt to water vastly
different from what is natural for it?
<I would at least partly fix... i.e. mix RO with some tap>
If it would be better to try to soften the water and lower the pH, how
would one go about doing that so that there is less chance of large
fluctuations?
<Please read here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwsoftness.htm
and the linked files at top>
If you have any other general advice about these fish that you feel
would be of help to us, we would greatly appreciate it. Thank-you so
much for your time.
-Lindsay-
<What little I know re the husbandry of Apteronotids is archived on
WWM.
Bob Fenner>
Black Ghost Knifefish Neale's go 9/7/09
Hi,
My fiancé and I have recently decided to get (back?) into the fish
keeping hobby. Both of our parents have had fish for many years. We
have absolutely fallen in love with Black Ghost Knifefish. We would
love to get
one. We will be getting a large (around 90 gallons) aquarium within a
month or two. This leads me to my question. I have read in several
places including this site, that these fish prefer soft water with a
low pH. Our
tap water is EXTREMELY hard, and has a very high pH. The pH is
somewhere between 8.4 and 8.8. The hardness of the water tests at least
as high as the test strip goes (300 ppm). (I cleaned our shower head
shortly after we moved in, 5 months ago. It is already about half
plugged up!) The KH also tests at least 300 ppm. Buying reverse osmosis
water from a fish store is not really an option, as the closest store
is 2.5 hours away. I have read that it is better to allow a fish to
adapt to the local water than try to alter it, causing the levels to
fluctuate. But then, I also read that BGK are very sensitive to water
conditions and are not easy fish. I guess my question is, which would
be the lesser of the two evils in this case; trying to 'fix'
the water parameters and risking fluctuations, or try to have the fish
adapt to water vastly different from what is natural for it?
<In this case, going for a 50/50 mix of tap water and deionised (or
RO water, or rainwater) would make sense. That said, Apteronotus
albifrons isn't usually killed by water chemistry issues, but by
water quality
problems. It inhabits fairly cool (around 25 C/77 F) bodies of water
around rapids and waterfalls, and is used to very high oxygen levels.
In the average tank with a poky hang-on-the-back filter it simply
doesn't enjoy the kind of water circulation -- especially at the
bottom of the tank -- that it needs. So, you need a big filter, rated
at 8-10 times the volume of the tank in turnover per hour. So a 90
gallon tank would need a filter up to 900 gallons per hour. Some of
that circulation might be done using powerheads in addition to one
large canister filter, but water quality is critical. Zero ammonia and
nitrite, obviously, but also low nitrate, sub-20 mg/l levels are
important.>
If it would be better to try to soften the water and lower the pH, how
would one go about doing that so that there is less chance of large
fluctuations?
<Yes, if you can't keep water chemistry stable, then don't
undertake such.
Hence, better to have moderately hard, basic water (10-15 degrees dH,
pH 7.5) that keeps steady than trying to aim for soft, acidic water
with a pH you can't control from week to week. That's why I
suggest a 50/50 mix of hard and mineral-free water, rather than
anything more extreme.>
If you have any other general advice about these fish that you feel
would be of help to us, we would greatly appreciate it. Thank-you so
much for your time.
-Lindsay-
<Is some stuff written here. I happened to have a piece about these
and other knives in June's issue of TFH Magazine, so if you happen
to have that, or your library has a subscription, then check it out.
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.>
Black ghost... hlth, sys., gen. -07/18/08
Hello. <Hello,> I found your cool site accidentally and have
learned a lot from reading on it mainly about Black Ghosts (great job
keep it up). I have gotten into the hobby on an unfortunate account
that my dad had gotten cancer and I was taking care of his fish 2 tanks
until he passed away. <Sorry to hear that.> Because of getting
back to a regular work schedule I was not able to get there regularly
anymore to help my step mom take care of the tank, so she asked if I
wanted it. I took it to my place using same water transported in
buckets did partial water change and so on when I got it to my place. I
guess the move was too much for them and the fish got ich and died off
after several weeks. ANYWAY, after letting the take "I hope"
get healthy so to speak.. as per advice of my LFS put some food in it
with no fish said it would keep cycle somewhat going. <You can
indeed cycle a tank by adding a pinch of flake, though you need to also
do water changes, and also keep adding portions of food every 2-3 days.
As the food rots, it produces ammonia, and that kick-starts the cycle.
It will still take the usual 4-6 weeks to fully cycle, and you need to
be measuring the nitrite level to see when the cycle is finished. If
you just add one pinch of food and leave it at that, then all that
happens is that one portion of food decays, the ammonia goes up, goes
down, and then nothing much happens. You MUST keep adding food so that
the bacteria have a constant source of ammonia. Essentially you're
keeping fish, without the fish!> I turned up the heat to in 90's
for couple weeks to hopefully kill off any ich that might of still been
in there. Finally getting to the BGK they are such a great fish.
<Yes they are, but also extremely difficult to maintain. Being very
sensitive to water quality, under no circumstances would you put one in
a tank less than 3 months old. You want the filter to not only cycle,
but also "settle down". The problem is that a new aquarium
goes through a period where the filter sometimes misbehaves, and you
get small nitrite or ammonia spikes. Exposing Apteronotus albifrons to
this phase would be a disaster. There's also a period where the
fishkeeper needs to get the hang of cleaning the filter without harming
the bacteria, and also doing things like siphoning out detritus from
the substrate, learning how much food to use, and performing water
changes.> He seems to go against a lot of things I was reading about
them. and I guess its on a fish to fish basis.. he is almost always out
even with the light on (as matter of fact I am watching him swim around
tank now and the light is on, he started eating out of my hand after at
first time trying one week after I got him, he eats flakes when I put
them in tank for my Kribensis. and he eats frozen bloodworms that I put
in tank at lights out. <All quite normal for well-adjusted, happy
animal.> This brings me to a question. I noticed today that the
bottom fin has a couple splits in it What are the usual causes of this?
<Not "usual" but may be either rough handling (netting,
transport); biting (by other fish); scratching (check for sharp
ornaments or gravel); or early stages of Finrot (check ammonia/nitrite
ASAP). You mention Kribensis, and all Pelvicachromis spp. are
territorial and quite prone to biting even substantially larger fish. I
have a small female Pelvicachromis taeniatus that quite happily charges
and chases pufferfish. So while basically good community fish, their
feistiness is out of all proportion to their size, as is often the case
with that family we call the Cichlidae.> There doesn't seem to
be any discoloration he seems to be aggressive towards my Kribensis
that I just put in about 4 days ago though that has become less
frequent. Kribensis doesn't seem to like to be around him and swims
away when BGK swims near him, so I don't know if Kribensis got
brave and did something when lights were out, but as I watch him he
still constantly swims away from BGK. <They are competing for the
same resources, namely caves, and will view each other as potential
rivals. It is absolutely normal for Pelvicachromis to be utterly
peaceful towards midwater fish but total terrors with regard to bottom
living species. Does obviously depend on the size of the tank;
Apteronotus albifrons will need a big aquarium, something upwards of
220 litres/60 gallons. Anything less and you WILL be asking for
trouble. They are fish of fast-flowing rivers, so also need a very
strong water current to burn off all their energy. I'd be looking
at canister filters providing not less than 6 times the volume of the
tank in turnover per hour. Forget about using anything hang-on-the-back
or air-powered!> So was wondering if you had any thoughts on what
might cause the splitting of the fin and what I should do so it
doesn't get worse. Thank you MUCH... and again thanks for this
great site. <Hope this helps, 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.>
Black ghost knife attacked by
loaches 1/14/08 We purchased a black ghost knife 3days ago
and from the very beginning the fish swam near the surface on it's
side and it seldom ventured to other parts of the tank. The fish was
approximately 4cm in length. In our tank we also have 2 clown loaches,
2 Pakistanian loaches, 1 Corydoras, 1 angelfish, 3 gouramis and a small
eel. <One Corydoras isn't nice. Corydoras are SCHOOLING fish,
which means they should be kept in groups. Please add some more of the
same species (unless you want to accrue a lot of bad Karma from the
catfish gods).> We started noticing that the black ghost knife was
being attacked by the loaches. The clown loaches are approx 6cm and
Pakistanian loaches 4cm. The tank is 4feet in length (980 Aqua One) The
tank has 2 plants and water is changed regularly, 25% biweekly. There
is a large rock with many holes to swim through and places to hide as
well as a fake pot with hiding capability. The temp of the tank is
approx 28degrees C. The tank was 34degrees C when the fish was first
put in; our thermometer was not working but I realised the temp when I
stuck my hand in. I slowly reduced the temperature using ice blocks.
The pH of the tank is approx 7.2 The bottom feeders are fed the
appropriate pellets once a day and we were feeding the others blood
worms. The only other thing I have noticed in the tank is a yellow
(algae?) growing on the sides of the tanks in round circles similar to
what would be seen with bacterial growth. We put in anti-algae drops
and cleaned the tank to deal with this. I have not yet observed any
re-growth. <Don't use Anti-Algae medications; they cause major
problems, not least of all their toxicity to other organisms as well as
producing nitrate spikes as all the algae die. What you have sounds
like Diatoms, a type of algae that grows most noticeably in aquaria
that are not adequately illuminated. Easily beaten by installing strong
lights and lots of fast-growing plants. Nothing else works, other than
manual scraping.> 1. do you think the ghost knife was unhealthy from
the beginning judging from it's behaviour? <It was probably
fine. But Apteronotus albifrons is NOT an easy fish, and is extremely
sensitive to poor water quality as well as medications/potions of
various types.> 2. is it normal for loaches to attack black ghost
knives? <Loaches are, with a few exceptions, NOT NICE FISH. They
aren't community fish (exceptions are Kuhli loaches, Weather
loaches, and to a certain degree Clown loaches; everything else is more
or less aggressive and should be treated as such).> 3. We would love
to get another black ghost knife but not if it is doomed to die before
it's time, can you suggest any other reasons for the loss of our
fish and tips to keep one safe in future? <Hmm... not impossible to
keep, and under good conditions live many (10+) years in captivity. But
you do need to cover all the bases... these aren't like Danios you
can just add to a tank and hope for the best. They have very specific
needs in terms of food, hiding places, substrate, etc. Do read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/bgksys.htm If you need more
info, get back in touch!> Thank you for your time. Sincerely, Ali.
<We're happy to help. Good luck, Neale.>
BGK...
sys. 01/13/2008 hi there, I have a quick
question. What is the minimum tank size for a black ghost knife fish?
Also are they freshwater or brackish? Thanks. <... a small
individual Apteronotus... 29 gallons... a full-size one... at least
55... Strictly FW... RMF>
Re: parrot fish with
Mormyrus
tapirus (freshwater African dolphin)... Now BGK sys. 1/9/08
p.s. after doing some more research, I fear that my 55 gallon will
eventually be too small for the black ghost fish. is this true?
<Eventually, yes. Maximum size in the wild is 75 cm, though aquarium
specimens are generally smaller, around the 50 cm mark. While this
takes many years to reach, this is ultimately a better fish for the
75-100 gallon tank than the 55 gallon tank. So does depend on where you
see yourself five years from now in terms of aquaria.> if so,
he's going back to the store as well.... <Hmm... does underline
the need to research the fish *first*, then spend the money. Cheers,
Neale.>
Was: BGK/Cycling a Tank/Dyed Fish 8/2/07
Thank
you so much for such a speedy response, it means so much. To answer
your questions; The tank I have him in is only a 10 (I know he will
grow out of this very quickly but he'll only be in it a couple more
days.) I figured this was okay as when I got him he was no more than an
inch big. He shares the tank with two "painted" tetras that
got put in there a day after I set the tank up. They did fine, so I a
day later I put the BGK in. Unfortunately, I was told 24 hours was all
it took to cycle a tank [And I work at a fish store ;\ ] After setting
up the tank and reading some information on your website, I realize I
should've let it run for at least 2 weeks. <Please read much
more on cycling tanks. You could let a tank run empty for a year &
it wouldn't cycle. Find out more about the bacteria needed to break
down ammonia to nitrites, then to nitrates, which much be removed by
weekly water changes. This entire process can take 2 weeks, if
"fishless cycling" & up to 6 weeks if cycling with fish
(bad idea--stressful to the fish). All this info is on our site. For an
instant cycle you can use Bio-Spira. I recommend you use this to cycle
your larger tank immediately. You owe this to your customers to know
all this. Please urge your manager/owner not to carry dyed fish! See:
http://www.deathbydyeing.org/ (can't seem to get that site to work
but excellent info there), http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Painted_fish
http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/pfk/pages/campaign.php Just do a
search on "dyed fish" & you'll find countless
arguments against it. I will not buy from any store that carries
them.> But I have kept that in mind as the BGK's new home, a 29
gallon [and not permanent] home is being cycled as we speak. <Check
into the adult size of your fish. You will eventually need a minimum of
a 90g tank. You owe it to your customers (& the fish) to know the
adult sizes of all the fish you sell & the minimum tank size for an
adult. You are aware this fish won't eat flake food? My 15"
fellow only eats live blackworms.> Anyway, as soon as I got your
e-mail I ran out and got both the Melafix and aquarium salt. So I'm
hoping by tomorrow, he will clear up a bit. Again, thank you for your
helpful response, and your time, I appreciate it very much. <I
suggest daily 50-80% water changes, until you can upgrade him to a
cycled tank. ~PP> -Adam
Black Ghost Knife, yellow water, killing fishes I have a
couple questions for you, I hope you take time in answering mine.
I see you do take a lot of care in the questions people ask.
Here's one; I am wanting to buy a black ghost knife fish. Is this
fish territorial? I already have a loach in here and I don't
want them to fight. <Likely will get along> Plus we don't
want to buy pellets or freeze dried food, so will it survive on flakes?
<No> My loach has been surviving for a couple months without
those foods. <Won't be healthy on nothing but flakes forever>
My second question is, my tank is getting yellowish color really fast
and we clean our tank (55 gallon) like once every 2 months. What is up
with that? <Need to do more frequent, partial water changes, maybe
weekly... and possibly use carbon in your filter flow path> My final
question is, my fish seem to be swelling up really badly, and then just
die. I put in some medicine. Is this what you call ich, if so
what is it and how do I stop it? Thank you. <... time to study...
and adapt a better maintenance schedule... It sounds like your system
needs more regular care... likely your fish deaths are due to poor
husbandry, a lack of nutrition, perhaps mis-medicating. Take a read
over our website: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwsubwebindex.htm
re Set-Up, Knifefishes, Maintenance... IF you want to be successful at
keeping an aquarium you need to learn more re what it takes to care for
it. Bob Fenner>
Black Ghost Knife I read that a BGK
likes tank temp.s up to 82 degrees. I've raised the temp. to help
cure him of a series of illnesses and he's been in an 84-85 degree
tank for about a month and a half now. How long can he tolerate the
higher temperatures? <Indefinitely actually... will shorten lifespan
a bit... but the only real worry here is aeration... dissolved oxygen
is less soluble and metabolic rates elevated at higher
temperatures...> I'm still treating him (with Paradigm for
flukes, worms etc) so I wasn't planning on dropping the temp until
this one hopefully goes away. Thanks so much for all your great info -
you've been a really wonderful resource. <Glad to help. Bob
Fenner>
Black Ghost Knife Help Hi there from another
fishaholic!<Hi Jennifer, MikeD here> Sorry to bother you with
petty questions that really don't apply to any of your other
visitors, but I *really* need some help regarding my black ghost
knife.<One of my all time favorite FW fish> Although I generally
research fish species very thoroughly before purchasing them, I only
did a little such research before buying a black ghost knife. It was
really pretty much an impulse buy, though I was at least somewhat
familiar with the species.<They're pretty tough if handled
right> At any rate, the manager of my LFS promised me that if I
purchased one, he would do just fine in a twenty-gallon, provided he
had plenty of coverage and was kept completely by himself. She did say
that it was pushing the limits to keep him in a 20-gallon, but that
he'd do okay, even as an adult. (He's 7 inches now.)<I'm
not sure why they told you to keep it alone, as they do well with many
other species if the tank is arranged correctly. As to the adult part,
my largest grew to about 15" if that tells you anything> Now,
I'm starting to have second thoughts on that. I assume he's
okay for *now* in the 20-gallon, but will he really be okay when he
grows up? I have an extra 35-gallon that I haven't stocked yet but
it's very well planted and decorated, as I tend to pride myself on
that. The problem is, it's very hard, brackish water, and it would
be a huge inconvenience to redesign and refill the whole thing.
Besides, I was really looking forward to the archers and Sailfin
mollies I was going to keep... But, if I need to, I'm willing to
change conditions if that's what it takes to save my ghost knife.
(I simply can't afford another large aquarium for him.)<OK.
While he WILL eventually outgrow the 20 (20L or 20H?), they are fairly
slow growers so you've got at least a couple of years before it
should become a concern.> Wow, you're very patient if you're
still reading this.<Still here **grin**> I guess, to get to my
point, can my ghost knife stay in that 20-gallon as an adult, or even
now? Or will I have to completely revamp the 35-gallon for him? Would a
35-gallon even be enough? Should I just swallow my pride and give that
poor fish to somebody that can take better care of him? Just how fast
will he grow, anyway? Maybe slow enough that he could stay in the
20-gallon until I could afford a new tank?<I guess I should have
waited until I got here to answer, eh? **grin**> Also, the LFS lady
told me that black ghost knives can be held and are even intelligent
enough to recognize their handlers... is this true? Sounds a little
odd...<It depends on what she means by held. If you cup your fingers
in the water, they will indeed swim into your hand if you train
them. I don't know what you're currently feeding it,
but they also appreciate meaty foods, with their favorite being
earthworms. They'll also appreciate ghost shrimp and even a piece
of raw shrimp like you'd have for dinner, unbattered, of
course. These are small cousins of the electric eel, and
I'm assuming you know that they navigate by true electronic sonar.
Because of this, never add another S. American Knifefish or African
Mormyrids, such as "baby whales" or
"elephantnoses"...they cross each others electric signals and
a true war will result> Thank you SOOOOO much for your help!
<You're very welcome>
Ghost knife fish Hi, I'm
totally new to keeping fish ..... Recently, (about 2 days ago) I
bought 2 knife ghost fish and a new fish tank for them .... I did
not do research before buying them. So here's the problem ...
the new tank is totally empty .. I haven't had time to go get
those "hiding" places for them .... Only place they
hide is behind a pump in the tank and they seems to be fighting
for the space ..... Do I have to separate them using a partition
in the tank ? Also one of the them had the fin like
"broken" that like hair .. not in one whole piece as
like the other... is there any wrong with it ? and what should I
do ?, < Black ghost knife fish are nocturnal (feed at night),
so they don't thrive in brightly lighted aquariums without
suitable places for them to hide during the day. You really
don't have to separate them as long as you give each of them
their own shelter to go to during the times you have
the lights on. Get a couple pieces of PVC pipe from the local
hardware store and throw it in there for now and they will be
fine . Although the tank will not look to good with a couple
pieces of white pipe in it.-Chuck> Thanks a lot Chasel
Re: Attempt to save Ghost knife fish Hi,
Thanks for the last reply. However,
I'm sending this out in attempt to save my fish. I now have a
tank with some plant and a log inside, 2 black ghost knife fish
and a swordtail. They live fine with each other and I had been
feeding them with flask and they ate them. < Sorry . don't
know what flask is so I don't know the significance is if the
black ghost knives ate them> But just yesterday, I notice my 2
black ghost fish are not doing well. They aren't moving much
even when I turn the light off ....and not feeding either. I have
no idea why this is happening. I don't have any tester to
test the water condition. My last water change of 30% was 5 days
also. They were still fine then. I don't know what else I can
do. All I did was a 30% water change this morning hope to save
them. Any similar situation to help ? < Well I guess we need
to determine if their behaviour change is a symptom of something
more serious. Try feeding some California blackworms, often
called Tubifex still at some pet shops across the U.S. If they
don't go for this look carefully for signs and symptoms of
some things we can specifically treat. I really don't like to
medicate a tank if it is not needed. In the meantime make sure
that the water is up about 80 degrees F and the filters have been
serviced and do another 30% water change. This should take care
of any water quality problems. If the fish don't respond then
I would remove them to a hospital tank were they can be observed
more closely and look for symptoms.-Chuck> Thanks Chasel
Re: Attempt to save Ghost knife fish, II Hi,
Its was a typo on the food I feed
them. I meant flake. But anyway, one of them is dead and the
other one is laying on the floor now. I did another 30% water
change, no use. I move the last one to another tank with and 80%
fresh water no use either. Thanks anyway < Black ghosts like
warm acidic water and usually don't eat flake food. If the
water they were kept in was hard and alkaline then their kidneys
may have failed due to an imbalance of minerals in
their system. Hard to tell. Sorry about your fish.-Chuck>
|
Lifespan of a Ghost What is the life span for a typical Black
Ghost? How sensitive are they to moving to a new tank? Nicole
<Couldn't find anything on lifespan so I'm not really sure.
They do like soft acidic water conditions. Move them the same as any
other. Float him in the new tank in a bag of his current water. give it
20 minutes or so, then slowly pour in some water from the new tank. Do
this a few times over an hour or so and he should be fine. If you test
water check the pH of both new and old. If they are the same, you just
need to match temp. Don>
Another Black Ghost Knife Question I Have a Black Ghost Knife
4", If I put on my Aquarium light (which I haven't turned
on since I had him, 4 months) will it stress him out or kill him
well because they hate light and are nocturnal)? He does have this
ornament with holes in it that he goes in and out of (prefers that then
the ghost tube), can he be in there if the light is on? < Black
ghost knife fish are nocturnal and should have a hiding place to
retreat to when the aquarium light is on. They should be fed just after
the lights are turned off.-Chuck> Thank You Jahner
Ghost knife? Hi there guys,<Hi Guru, MacL here with
you.> Absolutely love your web site.. I was wondering if you knew
what size tank I would need to get my ghost knife to grow to its full
length, and also roughly how big it would get in a 900L tank (approx
240 U.S. gallons and 200 UK gallons). <Guru I need a
little bit of clarification. Do you mean a black ghost or one of the
other types of knife or bony fishes? If you take a look here you might
find your answer, otherwise if you can clarify for me a bit we can go
from there. http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/knifefishes.htm>
Regards Guru
Black Ghost Knifes Hello. I read the FAQ but I am unable to
find the answer for my question. I have a rectangular tank is 16"
x 9" x 11". But I have 2 ghost fishes. It is healthy for the
fishes? I noticed that they sort of dance/swerve/bite each other in
that sequence. I am afraid that they are trying to kill the other off.
I bought a volcano rock (that's what the shop says) for the fishes
to hide. Seemed like they don't share. Should I buy another one to
keep the other happy? 1 last thing, the fishes don't eat the flakes
floating on the water. Instead they scoop around the top edges of the
tank. Thanks. I really those answer. Please <These fish need a
larger tank, at least 55 gallons even that may not be big enough to
house 2 of them, they are aggressive towards their own
kind. Check out the link below for more information on these
fish. Best Regards, Gage http://www.mongabay.com/fish/knifefish.htm >
Black Ghost Knife Hi Bob, Nice site. Looks like
you've got articles on everything in here. Hence I thought I might
ask some advice. I've been keeping fish for a few years now and
last year I took on a Black Ghost Knife fish as a favor for my local
pet shop. I am aware of how long this fish will live and how large it
will grow and I plan on getting a 60g tank in December. At the moment I
keep her in a 20g tank with a few tetras and a Betta but I have a spare
(34g) tank that I've been using as a hospital tank for my marines.
(I've added a pic of the big fella) Specifics are pH 6.8, Temp 25.4
'C. What I'd really like to do is swap the two round and have a
good size tank to keep the BGK in. Thing is I can't really find out
that much about them. I know it seems healthy, good color, eats well
(even a couple of tetras once) and its very active at night. The fish
has grown 1" in the last year (now 4") and now that I've
given the rest of the community to my little sister (fast becoming an
avid fishkeeper) I want to set up a species tank. Ideally I want at
least one other BGK but sexing is impossible and I've read that
they can be violent towards one another. Aside from these fish living
in South America I know little else about their habitat. I was thinking
of having a ground basalt strata with lots of spiral Val's and some
floating plants to give better cover. Perhaps even some staged lighting
to have a dawn dusk effect. If you give me a run down on the best kit
to set up this king of tank what type of filtration, lighting,
circulation and planting I'd be very grateful. Also should I go for
a second juvenile and hope they grow up happily with one another, or is
it better to stick to the one fish? < These are really cool fish.
Unfortunately they are nocturnal and only come out at night or at dusk.
They stay away from bright light. You might try red incandescent bulbs
to observe them at night. They prefer clean soft acidic warm water and
live food. They are prone to come down with ich and are difficult to
treat. This could be because they are rarely seen by aquarists
and are often diagnosed too late. They like lots of shelter
during the day so caves and logs are appreciated. Years ago they made
" Black Ghost Houses" which were nothing more than clear
plastic tubes with little feet on them. This way the ghost thought it
was hiding. I don't know how well they worked or if they still
available any more. These fish really don't see that well and get
around by using a week electrical field like electric eels to get
around. They get up to 18 inches and are being bred in
Thailand.-Chuck> Kindest Regards, Carraig Tuomas
Black Ghost Fish Hi <Hello>
I am setting up a tank for a ghost fish and want to know
what sort of plants are good for putting in the tank and what other
fish are suitable if any <Tropical South American plants are my
fave... ones that would, could be found in the same habitat. Tropica
has a nice website that shows some of these biotopes... and maybe some
sunken driftwood. Many medium sized characoids (tetra) fishes will go
with this Apteronotus... as well as Callichthyid catfishes... even
angels. Bob Fenner> Cheers Shelley Molloy
Black ghost knife problems? Hi Robert, I'm a
bit worried about my new BGK (my new favourite fish!). I am currently
setting up a new tank after becoming addicted to my boyfriend's set
up! New tank is 80 litres, planted and has a fine gravel substrate. It
is currently stocked with 2 Pearl Gourami, 2 Angels, 3 Tiger Danios, 2
Corydoras sterbai and a small (2.5 inch) BGK. <This IS small!>
Tank is two weeks into its first cycle. <Yikes... Knifefishes
don't "like" new systems... Hard on them to go through
their initial chemical, biological changes> The BGK has been in for
3 days and while it seemed happy in the first two (hiding amongst
plants) but I have come home from work today and it doesn't seem
right. It is sort of hovering around the bottom of the tank, moving
around almost like a drunk person. It kind of wobbles around a bit,
then rests and then wobbles around again. It has plants to hide in, as
mentioned, and also a piece of driftwood to go under but it doesn't
seem interested in this. <Mmm, well, this is pretty standard
behavior for the species... but... do you have another, older system
you can/could move it to?> At the LFS it was happy hiding amongst
Java Moss and seemed unconcerned with the lit tank (I'd watched it
there for a couple of days and it seemed very strong and healthy).
There are really no other signs/symptoms except this apparent
listlessness and my gut instinct (and it appears to be easily caught in
the relatively light current and moved along which wasn't happening
yesterday). I checked the water parameters and everything was fine - Ph
7.0, temp 26C. Nitrite was very slightly elevated but not of note (I
have added Amtrite down to fix this.) <Mmm, only temporarily and at
a "cost"... as stated, Apteronotus don't like
"going" through cycles> Is it just acclimatizing or do I
have a problem?? <Perhaps both> Please help, I was really
impressed with what I've seen on the site and decided you're
the man to ask! Thanks. Alia <Best to move the specimen to an
established, similarly peaceful setting, second best to be very careful
of not feeding much, urging your completion of biological filtration
(Please see here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwestcycling.htm.
Bob Fenner>
Black Ghost Knife / Filter Contamination
9/4/07 I'm an intermediate fish keeper, have been doing it for
a few years (beginner still, I suppose). Started with 5 gallon, then
20, and now a 72 bow. It has a wet/dry filter a temperature of about 81
degrees, and as far as water quality, I haven't read ammonia,
nitrite, OR nitrate in the past 6 months, and a PH hovering between 7.8
- 8.0. It's fairly established, maybe 9 months old, tropical
community. <All sounds very promising.> I recently purchased 2
Black Ghost Knives (BGK) fish from my LFS, and added them to tank (yes,
I know quarantine should be done, but college has me on a nickel-dime
style budget). <Ah yes, I remember those college days well!> The
fish (perhaps 4 inches) seemed very content, swam happily, found hiding
amongst rocks and water lilies, and came out at night to feed. None of
the other fish were aggressive towards the knife (with possible
exception of Zebra Danios, but they stay topside, and vice-versa for
BGK). <OK.> After two days, I had the lovely sight of coming home
to one of my BGK's stuck to the strainer on the overflow... lived
through that, but died soon thereafter (my fault, water flow rate has
been adjusted accordingly, they won't get stuck now). <This
doesn't sound like cause and effect to me. Apteronotus live in big
river systems, in quite deep water. It seems unlikely to me that a
filter could create too much current for this sort of fish. Usually,
when someone finds a fish stuck in the filter, the fish died, or was
weakened, and the filter merely dragged the body towards itself. A
healthy fish should have no problem avoiding a filter.> That death I
can understand. <I can't.> Five days later, I wake up to see
my other BGK lying on the sand (dead, of course). <I see. Now this
sounds as if you have two cases of Apteronotus death, with the filter
implicated just the once. This reinforces my opinion that the filter
had nothing to do with death #1.> No visible signs of biting or
otherwise aggression related harm. I'm totally stumped. My question
to you is this: Could the slightly high pH of my tank have slowly
killed him, or could it have been something else? I'd like to get
another, but I want to be sure of the problem on my end (if there is
one) so I can fix it, thus avoiding an unnecessary death of a beautiful
fish. <Apteronotus are not easy fish. They are incredibly sensitive
to water quality. In terms of water chemistry, they aren't
especially fussy (Fishbase reports pH from 6-8, 5-19 dH) and comparable
to most other South American tropical fish. So your pH/hardness issue
is unlikely to be the cause of death. The exception here would be if
the water chemistry *varies* a lot. But provided it was constant, even
a relatively high pH shouldn't be a problem. (This is true for most
freshwater fish in fact: steady water chemistry is more important than
clumsily going after some mythical "optimal" values.) So,
here's what I'd be investigating. Firstly, is your water
chemistry very different to that in the store? For example, do you
soften or acidify the water, or add peat to the filter. Secondly, what
scale/frequency of water changes do you do? Weekly 50% water changes
should prevent the inevitable background pH change in all aquaria from
becoming significant. But if you do small water changes, say, 20% every
couple of weeks, then the pH could drop in the aquarium over the two
weeks, and then rapidly go up when you add new water. This would be
bad. Thirdly, I'd be testing for nitrite across the day, maybe
three or four times. Sometimes, tanks develop nitrite problems shortly
after feeding, but seem to have zero nitrites at other times. Spikes in
nitrite concentration would be lethal to something as sensitive as
Apteronotus. Fourthly, are you adding anything to the water (other than
dechlorinator, naturally)? Some benighted folks go round adding stuff
like salt and anti-stress medications on a weekly basis, and while
hardy tropical fish shake off these misguided annoyances, Apteronotus
will not. While we're on the topic of dechlorinator, make sure
yours removes chloramine, if you live in an area where chloramine is
used. Finally, did you add any medication? Apteronotus are intolerant
of many commercial brands of things like anti-whitespot medication. If
you used these in the recent past, adding some carbon to the filter for
a few weeks might be a good idea.> Any help is greatly appreciated!
<Done my best!> -Brandon <Cheers, Neale> (thought of
another question, couldn't get a straight answer elsewhere)
<OK.> In my 72 gallon tank w/ overflow and wet/dry filter, I use
a filter pad that claims to be re-usable with cleaning. It's
instructions for cleaning are to soak 1 part bleach w/ 10 parts water
overnight, then rinse, then soak in plain water overnight again. Is
this adequate to rid the bleach? I've had some strange occurrences
lately (mollies dying, no reason) given my water quality is good (0, 0,
0, pH 7.8 - 8.0, 81 deg.), and am starting to think it might be bleach
contamination. Just curious on any insight or special tricks to know
when the bleach is chemically gone, not just sensibly. Thanks! -Brandon
<Agreed, this sounds like a dumb idea, so not sure why the
manufacturer are recommending it. If you need to wash something, hot
water should work fine. Sometimes I soak things in brine if these need
a deep clean (e.g., it's an ornament I left out in yard over winter
and its covered in mud and slime). Once you rinse the thing off, any
traces of salt will be harmless. It is entirely possible traces of
bleach have irritated your fish, leading to death. So, stop doing this.
Clean the filter the old fashioned way (in buckets of aquarium water)
and then replace sponges when they are so clogged they can't be
cleaned any more. NM>
Re: Black Ghost Knife / Filter Contamination
9/5/07 Thanks for all the info on the BGK! <You're
welcome.> I do bi-weekly changes of about 20%, so I would assume
from your reply I should be doing something more towards 40% on a
weekly basis? <More like 50% for something as sensitive (and big) as
Knifefish.> (Sounds like a lot of water, closing in on 30 gallons).
<Them's are the breaks.> I use a product called
"Prime" to treat incoming water, as well as some time
(chlorine has a slight evaporative property if I recall correctly).
<Absolutely DO NOT rely on chlorine evaporating. Use the full dose
as stated on the carton, and stir well. Also, if your local water board
uses chloramine, that won't evaporate.> I will begin more
thorough logging of pH and nitrite for a two month period or so, to see
average variance. <Very good.> In summary, I suppose, a 30-40
(even 50) % water change weekly would maintain a stable pH for my tank,
and not be detrimental to the fish at the same time (in terms of
massive quantities of water coming in and out on a regular basis)?
<Assuming you do the water changes regularly, the dilution effect
will mean the pH/hardness in the aquarium will be approximately equal
to your tap water supply. A week isn't long enough for the pH to
drop much. The main thing is to check temperature of the new water
matches the old, so that there isn't a huge temperature drop when
you add the new water.> It probably was the pH, because now that I
think about it, I changed 13 gallons of water the day before he died...
<Sounds like clutching at straws. What makes you think the pH
changed? What's the pH of the tap water, and what's the pH in
the aquarium? Water changes where the pH/hardness are the same in the
old water and new water DON'T DO HARM. That's old school
fishkeeping. Nowadays we've learned new water is best, and some
people even do 90% changes per day!> I'm so sorry for all of the
questions, but I care for my fish more than most people, and I want to
do everything I can to ensure their good health. <Very good.> In
regards to the filter pads, the problem with just washing with aquarium
water is that it won't clean it well enough. <Get over it.
Biological filter pads don't need to be deep cleaned. All you need
is to rinse off the worst of the silt. So, don't EVER wash
biological filter pads in anything other than aquarium water. For the
mechanical filter pads, deep clean with hot water, or else replace with
new ones. Now, this said, if your filter is getting so dirty the pads
are irretrievable, then you are either cleaning the filter too rarely
OR you have too small a filter for your aquarium. Under normal, correct
use a filter should only need cleaning at most once a month, and even
then the sponges should be easy to clean in buckets of water.> I set
mine up as two-stage filtering, first is a large plastic pad (kind of
like a scouring pad) to catch large debris (and the occasional small
fish). <????> The second one (which is bleach cleaned) is a 100
micron pad, looking more or less like felt. This makes for remarkably
clear water, but the downfall is that they needeth be changed every
three days at best. <The second filter is the biological filter. You
absolutely should not be cleaning this in anything other than aquarium
water. Your filter sounds basically inadequate, and almost certainly
not removing nitrogenous waste quickly enough. And that's why your
Apteronotus died. Until you create and mature a more reliable filter
system, don't buy any more fish> At $20 for every 9 of these, it
can add up. Bleach cleans them wonderfully, but I suppose if it's
hurting my fish I shall find another way. <Indeed you MUST. Please
read the articles here at WWM on filtration. I'm not convinced you
understand the theory and practise yet. You shouldn't need to
replace filter media more than once a year, and I don't replace
biological media for periods of 5+ years at a time. If you're
finding your filter media completely clogged up and useless before
then, you have a problem.> I much appreciate your help, and in a few
weeks, maybe a month, I'll take another shot at a BGK, and I will
be sure to let you know of the happenings of him/her). <No! It will
take 6 weeks, minimum to mature a biological filter to the point where
it is stable. Since Apteronotus don't do well in "new"
aquaria, I'd not expect to keep one safely for at least another
month or two after that. You need to review your filtering system.
Minimum, it should provide 6 times the volume of the tank in turnover
per hour (i.e., for a 55 gallon tank, the filter should be rated at
around 330 gallons per hour). The filter media should stay so clean
that you only need to rinse them off every 1-2 months. If you don't
have these things, you don't have a system that can contain
Apteronotus albifrons. Buy another one... and it'll die.>
-Brandon <Good luck, Neale>
Re: Black Ghost Knife / Filter Contamination
09/05/07 Again, thank you in kind for the help! <You're
welcome.> My tap water has a pH of about 8.0. <Admittedly not
ideal for this species. But not toxic, either.> Prime removes
chorine and chloramine. I mix water with powerhead in large plastic tub
with its own heater and digital thermometer to make sure it's
within 0.2 degrees of tank. I can deal with lots of water usage, lives
are at stake here ;-). <It's not so much that, as the fact doing
a 50% water change compared with a 20% one really isn't that much
work by the time you have the buckets and hose pipes. So you may as
well do a big water change and improve water quality while inhibiting
background chemistry changes.> Best thought about pH being cause of
death (more likely TDS or dH) is that I had gotten behind on water
changes (school starting, personal issues, etc..) had been maybe a
month. I can imagine pH could have dropped enough to cause a shock to a
Knife when higher pH water was added. <Indeed. That's why we
need pH test kits.> The filter pad in question is not the
bio-filter. It's a mechanical pre-filter for a 75 gallon wet dry
filter with a 700gph pump (which probably puts out more like 500 with
head and friction loss) = ~ 6-7 times turn over rate in tank (on full
flow - have a diverter to pump part of flow right back in sump if flow
need be slowed down - doesn't restrict flow from pump, but does to
tank). Will probably switch back to a more conventional pre-filter
(i.e. floss pads or similar) to alleviate consistent changing of micron
pad (which was every 3 days). These are easily replaced, so no need to
clean, right? Biggest thing that clogs micron pad is plant matter (tank
is planted, and a Geophagus brasiliensis enjoys digging them up/
chewing off bits of plants). Tank is established (in my mind, at least)
being almost a year old with no traces of ammonia, nitrite, or nitrate
in the past 6 months. The bio-balls never clog, but the mechanical
pre-filters do in time, from said plant debris. I think you simply
misunderstood my filter type, perhaps thinking I had a large power
filter or something similar. The wet/dry is marvelously efficient for
freshwater from my experience. <Agreed, these filters can be very
good. If the pre-filter is clogging, then just use something cheap
instead of the expensive units supplied with the filter. Ordinary
filter wool should work, no? Alternatively, clean the pre-filters much
more often, every couple of days if required, just rinsing them under
the tap.> I also enjoy very much reading your site, I spend a good
hour a day, 5 days a week on here trying to learn more. <Glad you
enjoy.> Anyways, I will try the larger volume water changes and see
how it works with current fish, and continue to test pH (and possibly
carbonate hardness and TDS...read up on those, apparently too many TDS
can cause a difficulty for fish's cells absorbing the diffused
oxygen in the water, and as for the hardness (if I read correctly) if
the hardness is maintained, the pH will be less likely to change, hence
providing a more stable water chemistry, which is the overall goal
here). <In theory, yes, TDS (total dissolved solids) is related to
osmoregulation. BUT, once a fish is acclimated to a certain TDS level,
sudden changes, even towards "better" levels, can be bad. So
it's better to have a fish acclimated to the "wrong"
water chemistry but maintaining very stable water chemistry and
quality, than trying to force your tank to the "right" water
chemistry while bouncing around pH/hardness in the process and skimping
on water changes because of the expense. In other words, don't
fixate on the value so much as the stability and quality.> I am
greatly in debt to your help, and am hoping to learn how to maintain a
VERY stable water condition, because I am very bent on being a
successful BGK keeper (saw a nice 75 gallon tank the other day, would
make nice home for a few years for him... till he got bigger, that is).
<There's no secret to stable water conditions: big tank,
under-stocking, good filtration, and above all, large and regular water
changes. Likewise, the causes of unstable conditions are well known:
too many fish, lots of organic decay (plants, general muck), clumsy
manipulation of water chemistry through use of peat or buffers, and
infrequent water changes. So, do the first list of things and avoid the
second list, and you're laughing.> Hopefully I can apply
everything I've learned from you and this website to make it
happen. Thank you more time! -Brandon <Glad we could help. Good
luck, Neale>