FAQs on Mastacembelid, Spiny Eel
Identification
Related Articles:
Spiny Eels,
The truth about spiny eels; A closer look at these popular but problematic
oddballs by Neale Monks,
Husbandry of the Barred
Spiny Eel,
Macrognathus panacalus by Marco Lichtenberger,
Related FAQs: Spiny Eels,
Spiny
Eel Behavior, Spiny Eel
Compatibility, Spiny Eel
Selection, Spiny Eel
Systems, Spiny Eel Feeding,
Spiny Eel Disease, Spiny Eel Reproduction,
By Species: Fire Eels, Peacock Eels, Tire Track Eels,
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Spiny Eel Identification and Possible Problem
6/7/18
A few weeks back, I bought some Spiny Eels from my aquarium supply store whose
supplier identified them as Macrognathus pancalus. They now live in my 55 gallon
tank and are the only fish in the tank (I will not be adding any more fish). As
they've gotten a bit bigger, I've noticed some differences in their coloring and
markings so I've been trying to get a picture of them to send you in the hopes
you could help me identify the different subspecies. I finally accomplished that
this morning. The pictures aren't that great, but they're the best my camera can
do, and when I looked at the picture of the lighter colored eel with the yellow
tinge in its tail I noticed what looks like redness around his/her gills.
<These photos are too blurry. One of them, with the oblique dark bands, might be
Macrognathus circumcinctus. The other one is much too vague to see anything at
all. But I would direct your attention to two additional species, Macrognathus
pancalus and Macrognathus siamensis. Macrognathus pancalus has a speckled upper
half of its body, plain lower half, and in between a distinctive row of
'dashes'. Macrognathus siamensis is the Peacock Eel, so-named for the series of
large eyespots on the dorsal fin
near the tail.>
As soon as I got the picture, the eel dashed off to hide, so I can't get a
better look at him/her. The reason I'm concerned is because last Saturday I was
watching my neighbor's kids for a while so she could run to the store and while
I was outside trying to stop the 4 year old from setting my horses free, the 7
year old dumped an entire almost new 1.2 ounce package of flake food into the
eel tank (eels don't like flake food).
<Yikes!>
It took some work, but I've got most of it cleaned up. I've been testing and the
biological filter is handling it well as no ammonia or nitrite has shown up, but
the nitrate has climbed up around 30 ppm (very dark orange, but no red), so I've
still got some work to do. As a precaution, I put the appropriate amount of
Prime in, so even the higher-than-normal nitrate shouldn't be bothering them and
all the other eels look and act normal. Is this something to be concerned about
and can you shed any light on the differences between these two subspecies?
Renee
<Spiny Eels aren't especially sensitive, and a series of water changes should
handle the water quality damage here. Assuming you've netted out and/or siphoned
out most of the flake food, I'd still change 50% today, and perhaps another
similar amount tomorrow. You want to keep nitrate below 40 mg/l with most
tropical fish, so that's your danger zone. The addition of a little salt may be
helpful with Macrognathus species, particularly if they're stressed or
off-colour, but isn't essential by any means. Salt
does, however, reduces the toxicity of nitrate a bit, which makes it helpful at
times. I'd not go beyond 2-3 gram/litre, though some species can handle
considerably more. I will direct you to some useful reading, here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_4/v4i3/Spiny_Eels/Spiny%20Eels.htm
Cheers, Neale.>
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Re: Spiny Eel Identification and Possible Problem
6/7/18
Thank you.
<Most welcome. Neale.>
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Abandoned eel 10/27/15
Hi guys. A neighbor of mine was recently evicted, and left their aquarium set
up. In it was the eel I'm attaching a picture of. Wondering if you can give me
an ID, so I'll know what I'm dealing with? Sorry at the time these are the best
photos I can get. This thing is fast!
<Appears to be a "tire track", Mastacembelus armatus.... gets big and is an
escape artist.... See WWM re.
Bob Fenner>
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Spiny eel confusion 3/27/15
I recently acquired a spiny eel identified as a Zigzag eel. Which I thought
topped out at like 8". Well now I have found their are two eels that are
sold as Zigzag eels. One that gets 38" and the other that stays under 12".
My question is.. How do I determine which species I have? I have multiple
tanks and can home either on appropriately just don't know how to tell them
apart. There's no way for me to get a picture of this guy without stressing
him to the max. The best description I can give is he's light brown across
his back with a darker brown across his middle and is currently about 5"
long and thick bodied.
<A photo would help here. There are several species sold as Zigzag Eels.
The two big species are Mastacembelus armatus and Mastacembelus favus, more
often called (in the UK at least) Tyre-Track Eels. These get to around 70 cm
(27 inches) or so, are intolerant of one another, and are accomplished
predators. Then there are various small Macrognathus species including
Macrognathus pancalus and Macrognathus circumcinctus. These tend to max out
at around 20-30 cm (8-12 inches) and get along well with each other. Being
small, they're relatively safe with other fish, though bite-sized prey like
male Guppies or Neons are possibly at risk. Macrognathus siamensis is the
Peacock Spiny Eel, and probably the commonest species in the UK trade.
There are some African species, commonly called Afromastacembelus, including
some stripy species, but they're expensive and you'd probably know if you
had one. I would have you peruse this article:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_4/v4i3/Spiny_Eels/Spiny%20Eels.htm
Covers most of the basics. Don't forget soft sandy substrate and ideally the
addition of a bit of salt to the water. Both these extras make these fish
massively easier to keep. Once sick, Spiny Eels are notoriously unlikely to
recover, so prevention is practically the only "treatment" in your medicine
cabinet. Cheers, Neale.>
re: Spiny eel confusion
Thanks, Neale. As soon as I received your email the little guy popped out so
here is the very best picture I could get.
<It is one of the small Macrognathus, likely Macrognathus circumcinctus or
something similar. Maximum length is around 20 cm; peaceful; does well in
groups; needs a soft sand substrate -- never gravel, that'll kill it
eventually -- and feeds on small worms and other live/frozen invertebrates.
Medium hard water in preference to soft, with a tiny bit of salt (1-2
gram/litre) used for optimal conditions. Not a brackish fish, but like all
spiny eels, a taste of salt seems to inhibit bacterial and parasitic
infections that cause serious problems for this family of fish. So ideally
keep on its own (certainly not with other bottom feeders) or choose midwater
tankmates that won't mind a tiny bit of salt: livebearers, rainbows, hardy
barbs, etc. Cheers, Neale.>
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Orange Zig Zag Eel... ID, care
8/16/13
Good afternoon,
I recently came across a spiny eel labeled as an "Orange Zig Zag eel."
I'm having trouble finding information on it and was hoping you might
have some experience with this species. Is this simply a color
variant of Macrognathus Circumcinctus? It has very similar barred
markings, but is entirely orange where a "normal" specimen is brown with
a tan stripe on its back. If this is the case, should I expect it
to have the same adult size/care requirements?
Thank you,
Ryan
<There are two "Zigzag Spiny Eels" in the trade, Macrognathus
circumcinctus and Mastacembelus armatus, and there needs are much
different. Telling them apart is not too difficult, and you can use
Google Images to find images of the two species. On the whole
Macrognathus are smaller and more tolerant of one another, whereas
Mastacembelus tend to be bigger and solitary (often aggressively
territorial). There's much good stuff about Spiny Eels here at WWM;
start here, and follow the links at the top:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/matacembelids.htm
There is, incidentally, an Orange Fantasy Spiny Eel, Macrognathus
lineatomaculatus, recently described by Ralf Britz; they're all very
similar to Macrognathus aculeatus in terms of size and behaviour, and
doubtless their aquarium requirements will be very similar too (soft
substrate, wormy foods, a little salt added to the water for optimal
health). See more at the PFK website:
http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/content.php?sid=2650
Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Orange Zig Zag Eel 8/17/13
Neale,
Upon further review, I noticed the Orange Zig Zag was labeled as
"Mastacembelus c. circumcinctus"
<Putting my hat on as a taxonomist, what you've written here means
"Mastacembelus circumcinctus, subspecies circumcinctus", which is the
normal, regular Macrognathus circumcinctus (this species being part of
the genus Macrognathus not Mastacembelus). But, I wonder if there's a
mistake made, and what the vendor meant was "Mastacembelus cf.
circumcinctus" which would mean "a Mastacembelus species similar to, but
not identical with, Mastacembelus circumcinctus". In other words,
something similar to what is properly called Macrognathus circumcinctus.
Clearly this fish isn't a plain vanilla Macrognathus circumcinctus,
though of course it might be an artificially produced form of
Macrognathus circumcinctus from a fish farm somewhere in Southeast Asia
in the same way that a Koi Carp is a domesticated, highly modified form
of Common carp, but a Common carp nonetheless. If that's the case, then
your Orange Zig Zag Spiny Eel would have precisely the same requirements
as ordinary Macrognathus circumcinctus, but with the caution that inbred
varieties tend to be that bit less hardy than the wild-type equivalent.
On the other hand, if this fish is Macrognathus cf. circumcinctus, then
it's not exactly the same as Macrognathus circumcinctus, albeit very
similar, so maintenance assumptions would have to be that bit more
circumspect, so while you could assume it'll be a smallish, sociable
fish, things like maximum size will be unknown.>
and I managed to find a picture:
(Hopefully it shows up in this email.)
<Nope.>
Based on the links you sent me, it is definitely not Macrognathus
lineatomaculatus, and it doesn't appear to have the tire track markings
of Mastacembelus armatus (though, the ones for sale are only 5 inches,
I'm not sure if that affects the pattern). It's a fine looking
eel, very pretty, but the last thing I want to do is buy an eel that
will grow 3 feet long in a 55g tank!
<No risk at all if it's Macrognathus circumcinctus or some other species
of Macrognathus; the biggest of these is Macrognathus aral, which gets
to about 40-50 cm in aquaria, but Macrognathus circumcinctus is small
(15-20 cm if I recall correctly) and most other Macrognathus are around
that size.>
The seller can't tell me anything about it (naturally), so...would it be
wiser to just pick a different species and not take the risk?
<I'd definitely take a gamble on these if they look healthy and the
price is right. Macrognathus are lovely fish.>
Thank you,
Ryan
<Most welcome. As should be clear, Latin names are infinitely more
useful with rare/oddball fish than common names, and I do wish retailers
would use them more often and more accurately! Neale>
Re: Orange Zig Zag Eel 8/17/13
Neale,
I just wanted to thank you; I decided to go ahead and buy two "Orange
Zig Zags." They're quite vibrant and appear to enjoy the company
of my Macrognathus pancalus eels thus far.
<Given adequate hiding places, this does seem typical of Macrognathus;
floating plants like Indian Fern are another useful trick, as they'll
often hide (and spawn!) in floating plants where you can see them.>
I really appreciate your help, you always give great (and accurate!)
advice. (100% agree with the Latin names; the hobby would be
better off for it, that's for sure.)
Thank you again,
Ryan
<Glad to be of help, and it's nice to know you've taken the plunge, and
hope it all works out well. Cheers, Neale.>
Zig Zag eel, sys., ID 3/29/13
Hi there my name is Anthony I purchased a zig zag eel about three months ago
and I was on a bit of a budget when I bought him or her. The eel is
currently housed in a 25 gallon tank with a Pleco, the substrate is a small
gravel since the store I bought it from was not very knowledgeable on the
species as the eel was sold to me as a "fire eel". I am upgrading the tank
to a 55 gallon early next week and would like to use sand as the substrate
but can't find a clear answer on what sand to use. I was also wondering what
exact species of the spinet eel I have, the eel does not have the wavy tire
track pattern but it does not have a zig zag pattern either. It's more of a
bunch of thick stripes on an angle that run from top to belly, mind you
there are a couple of thinner lines that run onto his belly. The back fin is
fully connected around his tail so there is no separation in the tail fin, I
am hoping I have one of the bigger species of the spiny eel but it's not a
big deal if its not. Thank you for your help in advance.
<In the US at least, the common "Zigzag Eel" of the trade is what used to be
called Mastacembelus armatus, but may well be Mastacembelus favus or indeed
some other closely related species. All are light brown with dark brown
markings, but there's a good deal of variation in the exact shape of the
markings. Use Google images or some other search engine to look for photos.
Do also look at Macrognathus circumcinctus while you're at it; while it
isn't normally traded as the Zigzag Eel, it's just possible it might be.
Otherwise, send us a photo, and maybe we can help you identify your fish.
Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Zig Zag eel 3/29/13
I just quickly did a Google search on the Macrognathus circumcinctus and
many of the pictures look very similar, thank you for the help.
<Welcome.>
Now this brings a another question what is the estimated full grown size of
this species?
<Not that big, around 15-20 cm seems typical. Basically a community tank
fish, though very small species such as Neons may be eaten, so choose
tankmates too large to be swallowed.>
I had mentioned in my other message that I would like to put a sand
substrate in my new tank but was unsure what sand was best for the spiny
eel. I have read mixed reviews of live sand in a freshwater tank and have
read playground sand and pool filter sand work as well, I just want to use
the best as I would like to have the best conditions for my spiny eel.
<Smooth silica sand (which is lime-free, so won't alter pH) is ideal. In the
UK this is widely sold in garden centres for use in horticulture, and I'm
led to believe the same stuff is also sold as poll filter sand. Avoid
anything sharp or not lime-free, as both these will be unhelpful, to say the
least! Silica sand seems very bright at first, but after a few months it
ages nicely, as algae and bacteria coat the grains, so don't worry too much
about the colour. If you want though, you can stir in some fine pea gravel
to darken it a bit, and your Spiny Eel won't mind. Cheers, Neale.>
Picture of my spiny eel 3/29/13
This is a picture of my spiny eel looks a lot like the Macrognathus
circumcinctus or half banded eel
<Indeed, does look like Macrognathus circumcinctus, or something very
closely related. All Macrognathus species are pretty similar in care; do
read Marco's excellent piece on M. pancalus, here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_4/v4i3/Spiny_Eels/Spiny%20Eels.htm
Cheers, Neale.>
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zig zag eels, stkg., more 8/1/12
Hello,
<Hello,>
I have just started getting into aquariums about 5 months ago. I am
addicted to it now. I have a 15 gallon tank now with some phantom
tetras, Kuhli loaches, and a zig zag eel.
<I see.>
I am going to buy a 37 gallon tank soon.
<Good. The Spiny Eel in particular will benefit from the extra space.
They aren't easy to keep in the long term. Do read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/spinyeelsmonk.htm
Your species, Mastacembelus armatus, is one of the biggest species and
should reach around 60 cm/2 ft in length, if not a little more.
Obviously even a 37-gallon tank is a short-term fix, and within a year
you should have graduated to something 75 gallons or larger. Do bear in
mind Spiny Eels are sensitive; you can't wait to buy the right tank when
the fish grows -- you need to buy the right tank before it grows
otherwise it'll die. I'm not being overly dramatic here. These fish
really are sensitive, and once they get sick, they're almost impossible
to treat. The 37-gallon tank should be okay for something like the next
6 months assuming your Spiny Eel is small, and doesn't get bigger than
20 cm/8 inches in that time.>
I will put the eel I've had for about 2 months in this new tank. I am
going to buy a black ghost knife which I've read is compatible with the
spiny eels.
<Can be, but Black Ghost Knifefish are *even* more sensitive fish.>
I was wondering if I could put a tire track eel with the zig zag eel?
<How big is the aquarium you plan on getting? If we're talking 150
gallons, then sure, you should be able to keep both, provided you
understand you need a soft substrate for the Spiny Eel and fast-flowing,
very clean water for the Black Ghost. Any aquarium smaller than 150
gallons wouldn't work.>
I really enjoy the eels and would like to add another one but not if
they don't get along. I have read mixed reviews and nothing solid to go
on.
<See, this is the thing. Lots of people buy Spiny Eels and Black Ghosts,
and they keep them (they think "successfully") for a few months or a
year.
But then these fish die. They think it died for no reason, but almost
always, the fish diet because the aquarium was wrong. Too small,
not enough filtration, and in the case of the Spiny Eel, the wrong
substrate (e.g., coarse gravel).>
The local pet store has told me they should be fine as long as i by a
tire track eel that is close in size.
<The least of your problems. Mastacembelus armatus is a predatory
species, yes, and adults can eat quite large fish -- though as a
good fishkeeper you would NEVER use live feeder fish! Likewise, Black
Ghosts have the potential to eat small, tetra-sized fish, though they
prefer worms and insect larvae. But neither species should view the
other as threat.>
If this is a bad ideal i would be willing to try other spiny eels, as
long as I keep the zig zag eel. thank you so much
<So long as you have 150+ gallons, it's a fine idea. Neither species is
easy to keep though, and I'd recommend you stick with the hobby for a
couple years before buying a Black Ghost -- they are extremely delicate
fish and easily killed by people who don't understand water quality
(including nitrate) and the need for high oxygen levels and
under-stocked aquaria, which is why you almost never see adults.
Mastacembelus armatus is a little hardier, but easily killed by
ignorance, and actually does better in very slightly salty water (around
2 grammes/litre) which would be incompatible with the Black Ghost. But
it can be kept in plain freshwater, you just need to understand that the
moment the fish gets a bacterial infection, it'll almost certainly die,
so you have to make sure it CANNOT scratch itself and is NEVER exposed
to non-zero ammonia or nitrite levels.
Make sense? Cheers, Neale.>
Re: zig zag eels 8/1/12
Thank you so much for the response.
<Most welcome.>
I have been doing some research and hope that you don't think I
was just jumping into this. I was told that my zig zag eel would only
reach 10 inches.
<Not the ZigZag Spiny Eel (Mastacembelus armatus and Mastacembelus
favus).
But there is a second species, Macrognathus panculus, that is less often
traded but may be sold under the ZigZag name. It does indeed stay
relatively small, around 20 cm/8 inches or so, and if you are REALLY
lucky, this is the species you have. But it isn't a common species. Do
read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_4/v4i3/Spiny_Eels/Spiny%20Eels.htm
That article gives you a pretty good rundown on what these smaller Spiny
Eels need.>
That is what was recommended for my tank at the time. The pet
store had tire track, peacocks, fire and zig zag eels. They said the zig
zag was the smallest. That has been another thing that i have read
online that seems to have different answers. They are either the
biggest or the smallest. What are the easiest ways to tell it is a
zig zag eel?
<Mastacembelus armatus is sandy brown with dark brown markings;
Macrognathus panculus is similar in basic colour, bit has smaller
markings (more like speckles) and has a very distinctive row of specks,
like a dashed line, running along the midline of the flank from gill
cover to caudal peduncle.>
Its markings seem pretty obvious and the tail was another indicator (it
is not separated like some) which i have read is an indicator of the
size being of a bigger spiny eel.
<Don't know what you mean by this.>
I have a small pebble substrate that was recommended for the Kuhli
loaches and was told it was perfect for the spiny eels.
<Absolutely not! If by some chance you do have a Macrognathus species
such as Macrognathus panculus, it MUST have a soft, silica sand
substrate (such as pool filter sand). I cannot stress this point too
strongly. Spiny Eels do better with sand. Gravel scratches them, and
sooner or later (it's a "when", not an "if") they get a bacterial
infection on their skin that is always fatal.>
As of now, i only feed my eel frozen bloodworms
<Will need much more than this. Try finely chopped seafood (tilapia
fillet, cockles, occasionally prawns or mussels) and very small
earthworms.
Bloodworms aren't a balanced diet, and there's also some risk of
introducing disease through them.>
and had read not to feed them feeders cause of harmful bacteria.
<Good.>
However, I will definitely stay away from the black ghost knife.
<Wise. Do also notice in Marco's piece he mentions the use of salt as
well. Trust me that prevention is better than cure with Spiny Eels.
Adding a little salt needn't cramp your style -- most livebearers and
Rainbowfish will tolerate the minimal amount of salt needed (2 grammes
marine aquarium salt mix/litre) but if you go up to SG 1.005 and sent
the tank up as a brackish system (that's about 9 grammes/litre) then you
could instead keep him with all kinds of fun brackish species like
Mollies, Knight Gobies, Glassfish, even Violet Gobies if you have the
space.>
Now i feel pressure to get a bigger tank asap.
<Ah yes!>
The tank size is somewhat of a problem. I could only probably go up to a
55 gallon.
<Too small for BGKs. They are massive fish when mature, and extremely
sensitive to pollutants in the water.>
If a tank this size isn't big enough for a zig zag, is there a spiny eel
that would work better?
<As it happens, Macrognathus species are quite sociable, so getting a
couple more would help. On the other hand, Mastacembelus species are
very territorial when mature, so best not kept in groups unless you have
a huge aquarium.>
I have a friend with a 120 gallon tank which his had for 15 years.
If you feel the zig zag eel is going to be harmed in a 55 gallon tank, I
will move it to his tank. thank you again.
<Do check which species you have. Send a photo if you want a second
opinion. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: zig zag eels 8/1/12
This is very disappointing news. It seems i have been
mislead on a bit of information.
http://animal-world.com/encyclo/fresh/Eels/HalfBandedSpinyEel.php
this site is where found some information before I contacted you. The
eel pictured in this link is identical to the eel I have.
<Well that's a species called Macrognathus circumcinctus. It's
one of the Asian Macrognathus, and as stated before, these are
fairly small, gregarious, basically easy to keep and feed, but they do
need a soft, sandy substrate.>
The fin is the same, color is about the same. I am aware the name
given is different then what I have given, but as you have probably
seen, tyre track, zigzag, and banded eels are being confused with each
other.
<If you rely on common names, then yes, confusion will be frequent. Best
to stick with Latin names with Spiny Eels.>
I appreciate your complete honesty and all the information you have
given me.
<Welcome.>
The substrate is a shock, cause I asked specifically for one that would
harm Kuhli loaches and spiny eels.
<Not an expensive fix, so I'd not worry overmuch. I use smooth silica
sand (here in England called "silver sand") from a garden centre, and it
costs no more than the gravel.>
When I set my new aquarium up, i will use sand.
<Cool. Just be sure you know what you're shopping for, smooth silica
sand.
Not sharp sand (obviously!) or coral sand or any of the fancy sands used
in planted tanks. Just plain vanilla smooth silica sand. Feel free to
add gravel (up to about 10% of the total substrate) if you want to tone
down the colour of the smooth silica sand and give it a more natural
look, but plain sand on its own looks great and ages nicely, getting
much darker than it looks at first.>
I have looked at feeding my spiny eel earth worms, but was told not to
until it reached a bigger size.
<For sure.>
I will probably try to feed them as soon I can. The brackish water
idea has never been referred to me. It is a great idea and I am going to
look into it. Is it safe for Kuhli loaches or should i wait to
setup my new tank with brackish water.
<Kuhli Loaches cannot be kept in brackish water. Macrognathus
circumcinctus isn't a brackish water species, so I'd not keep that
species in brackish conditions anyway. Basically avoid water that's too
soft or too hard, and if your tankmates allow, add 1-2 grammes
salt/litre of water. Kuhli Loaches won't like that, but if you change
the aquarium around, bear this in mind and choose species that will
tolerate a little salt. It isn't 100% essential, but it can make a big
difference to the ease with which they are cared for.>
Please let me know if the link provided helps clear things up or is just
more misleading information.
<It's not a bad article at all, though I'd argue with a few minor
things, like using "aggressive" when they mean "predatory", and their
water chemistry recommendations are the complete opposite of what's
stated as their natural habitat on Fishbase.>
Thanks again Neale.
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: zig zag eels, comp. 8/1/12
Very last time I bother you. Now that the species is known and I feel
more confident. Could you give me just a bit more advice. Is
a 55 gallon take sufficient for this species of eel
<Yes.>
and is it safe to add other smaller species of spiny eels?
<Provided the size difference isn't huge, then yes, various
Macrognathus species (but not Mastacembelus) species can be combined.
Allow something like 10-15 gallons per specimen, not so much
because they're territorial, but so they have enough space to find food.
Spiny Eels are extremely easy to starve.>
Recommendations on other fish to add with this species.
<Anything that isn't so small it'd get eaten is a good start. But also
leave out anything that feeds from the bottom. You will have a hard time
feeding Spiny Eels at the best of times! No loaches, catfish, etc. Your
Kuhli Loaches may be small enough to be eaten by the Spiny Eels when
they get big enough. Good tankmates would be medium-sized, non-nippy
barbs, tetras, Rainbowfish and livebearers (and the last two groups
especially if you wish to add salt).>
I know the Kuhli loaches are not good tank mates for spiny eels and I
always have had the intention of moving the spiny eel or Macrognathus
circumcinctus to a bigger tank.
thanks
<Cheers, Neale.>
Flower Pattern eel - What kind of
Spiny eel? 04/03/10
Hey Crew,
<Howdy Matt>
I recently purchased a flower pattern eel from my LFS. I asked the
owner if he knew of any other names that this eel went by when he
ordered it. He said the only name he could find was flower pattern
eel.
<And... it's a Mastacembelid?>
I can not find any info on this type of spiny eel and was wondering if
you knew what I had.
<Nope... but I have an idea of where to look next>
I'm mainly interested in how big he will get. I currently have him
in a heavily decorated 55 and he is amazing. Since day one
"Rocky" has eaten from my hand. He loves earth worms. He will
come up to the glass and greet me when I come home and loves to relax
in one of his many caves during the day. He and a striped peacock eel
get along OK, but the striped peacock eel is much more passive.
I've seen the flower eel scare him off a few times but no damage is
ever done and 90% of the time they are indifferent of each other. An
amazing super smart spiny eel. Any ideas on max length on this fellow?
Thanks, love the website, read and learn something new everyday.
-Matt
<Mmm, take a look on Fishbase.org
Information by Family
Mastacembelidae
At bottom left, Show species
Do you see a pic of your specimen?
Click on it and
Read on!
Bob Fenner>
Re: Flower Pattern eel - What kind
of Spiny eel? 4/5/10
<The "Flower Pattern Eel" is a new species of
Mastacembelus from Southeast Asia. I don't know anything specific
about it, but you can assume it's much like the others in the
genus. Expect a size around 60-75 cm, predatory
towards fish up to the size of Swordtails, territorial towards its own
kind, and extremely sensitive to bacterial infections. The use of small
amounts of salt, 1-2 grammes per litre, is often recommended and may be
wise at least for the first couple of months. Feeding is problematic,
and healthy fish have large appetites. Not suitable for community
tanks, but in tank with a sandy substrate and lots of floating plants
could be kept alongside Silver Dollars, Kissing Gouramis and other
large, non-aggressive community species. Avoid anything likely to
damage its skin, e.g., cichlids. Bumblebee gobies would be nothing
other than live food. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Flower Pattern eel - What kind
of Spiny eel? Fdg. "Tiger" Bumble bee gobies ID,
Neale 4/5/10
Bob, thanks for the website. Unfortunately I wasn't able to make a
100% positive identification from there, no biggie. To me he looks like
a big zig zag eel, but I always thought they were the smallest of the
spiny eels.
<There are at least four species of Mastacembelids commonly labeled
as such>
He looks a little bigger than most zig zags I've ever seen.
I'll keep watching and make sure he doesn't out grow his home.
Maybe if I can snap a good picture of him sometime I'll send it in,
he is not a very colorful fellow nor does he have an elaborate pattern
so it is hard to find any distinguishable markings to compare with.
He's very brown with some black markings along the top half of his
body all the way back. Tough to ID with some of the small and black and
white photos they have.
I do have a few other question if you don't mind. I feed both my
eels mainly earth worms. About a 1/4 to a half inch piece once or twice
a week.
I've read spiny eels "reuse" their food and don't
have to eat for 2 weeks sometimes.
<Mmm, ones in good condition, health, can go this long w/o eating...
but better to offer food every other day at least>
What kind of schedule do you recommend. They look very healthy and have
never seemed too thin or overly bulging so I figure I am doing good.
What else should be a staple in their diets?
<Please read here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/spinyeelfdgfaqs.htm
Spiny Eel ID 2-9-08 Hi, I was wondering if someone
from the WWM Crew might be able to help me figure out the sort of
Spiny Eel I have. <Hello! Merritt here!> When I got the eel
I have (it was more then a year ago) she (or he) was very timid,
very small, and wanted to hide all the time, as I would assume
that most eels do. I was told at the time that she was a Black
Leopard Eel, as I couldn't actually find anything on that being
even a real name of a fish I tried to find out what she was on me
own. <Smart move> For the first few months I never saw much
of her or what she looked like. Now that she's gotten used to her
surroundings, I've been able to get a good look at her markings
almost every day now for the last few months, and was finally
able to get a good picture, but I cant find anything that looks
like her. Im starting to wonder if Im either not looking in the
right spot, or if her markings are just to light? <They will
develop as she matures.> If it helps here's some info on how
she acts and her growth. She went from about 5 inches long and
just under and inch tall in the middle when I got her, to just
under 14 inches long and about an inch and a half tall in the
middle in about a year. She loves frozen blood worms and likes
frozen brine shrimp, and her favorite seems to be ghost shrimp
(but I only give the ones I breed so its not to often she gets
those). <Nice variety in diet, keep it up!> She gets along
great with the two (about 8 inch) Plecostomus that have. But she
did attack one of two angel fish (They were about 6 inches tall
at the time when she was still little) during the night of the
first day after they got in the tank after quarantine. I clearly
dont plan on adding anything else to the current tank or when I
get a bigger one for them. During the day she will come to the
surface and take cubes of food from my fingers and oddly (never
had another fish do this) likes her sides rubbed. <Many
species of eels like to be touched.> She will also try and
attack the fish in the tank next to hers. I assumed the first
time she was hungry but even when she has leftovers that she
doesn't eat she still attacks, similar to a Betta. Hopefully
between the picture, and her temperament someone might be able to
tell me what exactly it is I've been keeping in there. And also
please dont think that I was irresponsible for getting something
without knowing what it was first. Normally I make sure to know
exactly what Im going to be putting in my tank long before I get
it. However when I had gone on my trip that ended up with the
eel, I had just finished cycling a new 30 gallon tank set up, and
my list was for a Betta, and few swordtails as I was planning on
just having a well planted tank. But there was a 5 year old with
his dad and one of those 2 gallon Betta bowls not even big enough
for a Betta who was looking at picking out the eel. And I had
enough common sense about eels that it needed something bigger
then that to live in. <I can understand the saving a fish from
death story, I have done it a few times at pet stores. From the
picture I think you might indeed have a spiny eel (Macrognathus
siamensis) but here is a link to FishBase if you want to be 100%
positive.
http://www.fishbase.org/Summary/SpeciesSummary.php?id=50400>
The link to the picture is
http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m304/yuugana/dessy.jpg if the
attachment didn't work. Thanks much Jacob <You're welcome!
Merritt A.>
Re: Spiny Eel ID, Neale's further input to Merritt and
querior 2/10/08 Hi Merritt, From the photo
of the spiny eel in Sunday's FAQs, my best guess would be
that is not in fact Macrognathus siamensis but actually one of
the species in the Mastacembelus armatus/favus complex. The size
of the thing is one clue; if the plants are Amazon Swords, then
that spiny eel has to be a good 30 cm long, way too big to be
Macrognathus siamensis. The colour markings are quite close to
Mastacembelus armatus, just restricted to small spots instead
of squiggles. In any case, it's a large Mastacembelus
spp of some sort, will get to about 70-90 cm in total length, and
is predatory. I've made the mistake of keeping these fish
with things as big as swordtails, and they get eaten! Cheers,
Neale
|
|
Spiny Eel questions... ID, sys.,
comp. 2/26/07 Hiya, WWM. This is Ashley again; the
paranoid person with the two spiny eels named Hope and Doom. <Hi
Ashley, spiny eel keeper Marco here.> I'm pretty sure
they're what I've seen called yellow-tailed spiny eels.
(Mastacembelus armatus) <I just had a look at your older mails with
pictures and hesitate to agree, because the second picture seems to
show that they have a separate tail fin in contrast to an unbroken fin.
If that's right, they are not M. armatus, but a smaller species,
probably Macrognathus pancalus (max. 7 inches). Have a look at the tail
fin to verify.> They're still going strong, eating like pigs,
and uprooting my plants. I have been considering "downsizing"
in the fish department, since I have 5 tanks to keep up with now, along
with tons of fish, and many other pets. <Thats just the beginning,
you are already addicted> I was wondering if the two eels would be
okay in a 10 gallon together (alone). I read somewhere that they stop
growing at about 6 inches <Not if they are healthy M. armatus.>.
I was thinking about either keeping them in a 10 gallon, or keeping
just them, the gold dojo loaches, and the Pleco(s) in the 30 gallon.
Which would be better? <If they are M. armatus, both tanks are too
small in the long run, since these fishes will get 90 cm (35 inches)
long. If they are a M. pancalus or another Asian species with separate
tail fin, the 30 gallons would ok.> I'm also wondering if the
activity of the other fish (various guppies, mollies, platies, the
loaches, and the Pleco) affects the eels' activity level. They are
fairly active during the day, and I'm wondering if I take the other
fish out, will the eels' activity level go down? <To me it seems
their activity is high, when the tank mates are peaceful, and low, when
they are intimidating the eels.> Or do I just have some really weird
eels? Thanks in advance for your reply, Ashley. <You are
welcome.> Oh, and since they're fairly little, and don't
even bother messing with anything bigger than a bloodworm, do you think
they would harm 2 two and a half-inch Kuhli Loaches? I was told that
they would attack them like worms... <They are probably safe with M.
pancalus, but would be eaten by M.
armatus>.
Re: Spiny Eel questions...
3/1/07 Thank you so much! I have never noticed that there was any
difference in the tails of the different species...They look most
definitely like Macrognathus pancalus to me, now that I've looked
it up. They do have separate tail fins, not one whole one. Thanks again
for your help! Ashley. <I am glad we could help. Good luck with your
eels. Cheers, Marco.>
Spiny
Eel IDing...and a few other questions. 1/27/07 Thanks
again for your quick reply. I looked at the FishBase pictures and
descriptions, and didn't find anything that looked like them, but
on one of your Spiny Eel pages, I found a letter from another reader
who had what they called a "Yellow-tail Spiny Eel" and it
looks exactly like what mine looked like in the store I rescued them
from. (Wal-Mart... They were sold to me as Fire Eels. <M.
erythrotaenia they are not> I knew that wasn't what they were,
but they had no idea what the difference was between Fire Eels and
other Spiny eels... They were $9 each! It was worth it, though.)
I'm not sure if it's the lighting, or if they just changed
their colors, but they're both more grayish now. Doom's fins
are still yellow, but you only notice it when she burrows in the gravel
and when she's up against something. They have these
square/rectangle spots all over their bodies, if that helps at all. And
right now they're 4 or 5 inches long, give or take a bit, since
they never sit still unless they're eating. And on the
subject of eating, how much frozen bloodworm should I give them?
<Mmm, not too many...> The LFS was out of the kind that's
cubed, so I bought the other kind, the frozen slab-looking thing. I
break off about an inch long piece, and thaw it, and they greedily
gobble it down. I try to satisfy the other fish with frozen Brine
Shrimp so that the eels will have a fair chance at the bloodworms, and
it seems to work. I just don't want to overfeed them, but I also
have had trouble with previous eels and underfeeding. How often should
I feed them? I feed them about 2 or 3 times a week, with a good amount.
Thanks again! Ashley <Really a matter of
subjective evaluation... a look/see at how full... they appear... look
up the term "index of fitness" on WWM. Bob
Fenner>
Mastacembelus ID and Wild-Eyed Angel -
01/23/2007 Hi, it's Ashley again. <Hi Ashley, Sabrina
with you today.> You may remember me as the person with the
overstocked tank suffering from some sort of poisoning (new sponge,
possible chlorine)...Well, they're (the fish) all just fine
now, no more deaths, and they're all in the other tank. They
seem to be back to normal except for Jack, the Angelfish. He is
fine physically, but he hides at the back of the tank when I come
anywhere near the tank, (before the incident, he'd beg for food
at the front, or just show off his fins) and he also has a
'wild' look in his eyes. And at first I thought he
wasn't eating, but he does eat a little. Just not when I'm
around. He almost seems as though he's had some sort of brain
trauma...is that even possible??? <Mm, possible, but more likely
the animal is still recovering from whatever issues they dealt
with.... Without seeing the previous correspondence,
though, I don't know what troubles they had.> And I have
some pictures of my two Spiny Eels, and I was wondering if you
could help me ID them. I believe they are some sort of ZigZags...I
am attaching the pictures. The one in the gravel is Doom, as well
as the one under a plant, and the paler one is Hope. They have the
same markings, but Hope seems paler, and Doom's fins are more
yellow. <The images aren't clear enough for a definitive ID,
but I'd wager that they're Mastacembelus armatus,
tire-track or zig-zag eels. You might also consult
Fishbase's listings of Mastacembelidae: http://www.fishbase.com/identification/specieslist.cfm?famcode=432&areacode=
> Thanks for all you guys do! <And thank you for your kind
words! Ashley And I scanned the pictures of the eels, no viruses.
:) <All the best to you, -Sabrina> |
|
ZigZag Eel question, ID and
more 1/20/07
I've been looking for an
excuse to E-Mail you all, <Heeeee! No need> First question,
I'm curious, are you all biologists with extensive schooling or
are you just extremely dedicated hobbyists? <Mmm, a mix... we
are all volunteers (I am the common progenitor)... a bit of our
backgrounds is posted... http://wetwebmedia.com/WWMAdminSubWebIndex/wwmcrew.htm
Some of us have an academic background in related "life
sciences"...> Anyways, I'll move onto the real
question. I need help identifying this Spiny Eel I bought at a
local fish store. It was listed as a "ZigZag Eel" and I
had just assumed it was a Tiretrack Eel, but I'm not completely
sure. <Mmm, there are quite a few Mastacembelid eels sold as
such...> I've seen a few images of comparable fish but
they're all listed as "ZigZag Eels" with little solid
information. I mainly need to know if this is one of the big ones
or will it max out at (hopefully) 6'' or so? I'm sorry
if I'm being an idiot, I'm just having trouble finding a
clear line between a "ZigZag Eel" and many of the Spiny
Eels commonly found in fish stores. <You/we're in good
company... the best simple course of action is for you to go to
Fishbase.org here... insert the above family name (Do you see the
tray to drop down?)... look at the nominal species images for an
ID... read re the species posted there> How is their
disposition? Will I have trouble with it hurting any of my fish?
How about dietary requirements? <Most Mastacembelids, even the
ones that get quite large, are easy going... only trying to eat
even small, slow fishes if trained to do so, and/or very hungry...
they eat worms of many kinds, insect larvae... can be trained to
take meaty foods...> Ok, about the last question. I know they
prefer live food, I've read this everywhere. The thing is, I
bought this one maybe two or three weeks ago and he seems fat and
healthy. I feed the Needlefish that he shares an aquarium with
'Rosy Reds', which I'm sure, are far too big for him to
eat. I also throw in Ghost Shrimp occasionally; however, I'm
sure they're also too large for a fish this size. Its mouth
seems tiny. I feed my fish various foods, trying to find the right
combination. Here is the (not so complete) list. Frozen, cooked
shrimp (Treat for the Dragon Goby), Algae Wafers (Stopping these
right away, they're discoloring my water), Freeze Dried Tubifex
worms, Freeze Dried Krill, two brands of flakes and Shrimp Pellets,
along with the live foods, the Ghost Shrimp and the Rosy Reds.. Is
it possible he is eating and thriving on one of these foods? Which
is most likely so I make sure to feed him often enough? <Small
worms and insect larvae (often labeled as "worms" of
various sorts) are best for small specimens, species...> Like I
said, it's been 3 weeks since I bought him so I don't think
he's starving; he has to be eating something. Now I need to
know about the temperament of this fish. So far everything has been
alright, of course he only comes out when the lights are off
(it's getting better about this); however, I noticed something
alarming the other night. My Dragon Goby shot to the other side of
the tank; he's usually calm and never moves quickly for
anything. A fish this big is noticeable when he does something like
that so I turned on a nightlight to see what was going on. The
Dragon Goby was sitting in its 'hole' like it always does
but the ZigZag Eel was inside... of him... The ZigZag Eel had about
half of its body inside the Goby, the other half through the left
gill. I turned the lights on to scare off the ZigZag Eel and it
worked. The Goby is fine, he immediately came to the top of the
aquarium looking for a treat and a day later is just as healthy as
he has ever been. <Yikes!> Should this be something I should
be concerned about? Or do you think it was a freak accident on the
part of the ZigZag Eel? <I would be concerned... that the Goby
try to consume the eel...> Maybe even an aggressive move? This
is the kind of information that the internet rarely provides except
for with the more popular species. I appreciate any help you can
offer, thanks. -WJ <Perhaps you will pen an article re your
experiences here... In discerning the spiny eel species,
determining their habitat, foods/feeding, and temperament. Bob
Fenner> |
Re: Forgot to attach picture. (ZigZag
Eel question) 1/20/07 Unbelievable, I knew I would
do that. <Heeee!> Here is the picture of the Eel I'm
trying to have identified. I apologize for the bad picture quality,
I had to do this in the dark. Thank you, -WJ <Mmm, does look
like a Mastacembelus armatus from what I can make out: http://fishbase.org/Summary/speciesSummary.php?ID=10140&genusname=Mastacembelus&speciesname=armatus
BobF> |
|
Spiny-eel Hi, regarding one of the photos on
WetWebFotos.com, specifically the one depicting "Macrognathus
siamensis", appears to be of Macrognathus aral, sometimes referred
to as the striped spiny-eel. I don't know if you're aware of
this, but I thought I would bring it to your attention, I hope you
don't mind. Apart from this, I find it to be a very good site, and
should improve as more species are added. All the best, Dave Curran
<Thank you for this. Will send off to Zo for amending. Bob
Fenner>
Yellow
spiny tail eel I have had difficulty finding info on the yellow
spiny tail eel. I bought one from PetSmart a few months back, and they
were unable to give me any info on it aside from the name. This
particular store has been known to label their fish wrong, so it could
be the wrong name. <Am sure this is a member of the spiny eel family
Mastacembelidae, but fishbase.org does not list the common name, even
w/o the "tail" in it...> All I know about it is that
it's from the same family as the peacock eel and fire eel, right
now is 3 inches, cost me $2 (a lot cheaper than my peacock eel), and
that it likes live worms instead of commercial fish food. <Most
Mastacembelids do> If you could supply me with any info at all, such
as how big I can expect it to get (it is currently living with my girls
guppies and mollies), I would be extremely thankful. My email is XXXX.
Thanx,
Josh
<Josh, what little we have on this group is posted here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/matacembelids.htm
and the Related FAQs (linked, in blue, at top). Bob
Fenner>
Why does
my fire eel have yellow markings? >Hi, >>Hello, Marina
tonight. >I have had a fire eel (now about 9") for almost a
year. He was about 4" when we got him. He used to live
in a 25 Gallon Eclipse (eel proof) until I bought the new 90 gallon
tank back in March. Quick cute story- thought I lost him last winter.
Went missing for about 2 months. Turns out he was living in
the hidden compartment eating bloodworms as they got sucked up the
tube. No worse for were, but bigger. Didn't suspect a problem until
the water level on the filter was way too high. Anyway, he lives with a
couple of zigzags, a black ghost, a golden Gourami, 4 pearl Gouramis, 5
red Serpae, and a tiger barb. Normal for the tank is flake, frozen beef
heart and frozen bloodworms. The big question. Whenever I see a photo
of a fire eel it has red markings. Mine is dull yellow. Any
ideas? Thanks in advance either way. Great site!
>>I've seen them both ways, and have always assumed that
it's just a variance on coloring. Try this link for some
ideas http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/matacembelids.htm
>>I hope this helps. Marina
Eel
ID hi my name is Maryanne we have just brought a eel and
no one knows what type of eel it is, it has brown coat and dark brown
spots and a long head can you tell me what sort of eel it is please.
thank you < Hi Maryanne I would need to see a picture of it to say
for certain. It is best to learn about the animals you are
going to bring home before you bring them home. Does it look
like either of the eels at the link below? http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/matacembelids.htm
You could also try using Google.com to search for freshwater eels, or
marine if that is what you have. -Gage>
Peacock
Eel average questions/conflicting answers I just discovered your
website and I LOVE IT! I've been a constant freshwater fish fan for
years and I have just purchased a peacock eel (Mastacembelus
erythrotaenia <<This is a/the Fire... perhaps
Macrognathus
siamensis? RMF>) and I was just wondering if there was
any way to tell the difference between the sexes. Also I have done as
much research as I can and I have found so many conflicting reports it
makes me dizzy. I just want to make sure I have the basics right so
that he/she can live long and happy. For now he's in a 29 gallon
(and in about 4 to 5 months to be moved to a 75 gallon) and the
temperature goes from 70 (at night) to 75 (in the day). He is in
something the pet store called "red sand" but it isn't
red and looks like normal sand. The pH sometimes varies from 7.1 to
7.4. He seems to love the sand and only 5 minutes after releasing him
he had found a perfect spot to dig and stick his head out. Some of the
websites I visited said that they could eat flakes or pellets, is this
true? for now he seems happy just to eat bloodworms that come out of
this feeder when they are unfrozen. I was thinking (because I know in
general spiny eels like live food) to add 1 male guppy and 2 female
guppies so that when they mated he could eat the fry. My brother has a
soft shelled turtle that he does this with and it seems to work rather
well. In a couple of websites they said it would be ok to put him with
a knife fish. My knife fish is very friendly and for the short time I
had a sting ray in there (babysitting for a friend who's bacteria
had all died after his younger brother poured in a bunch of VERY old
fish medicine) the knife fish actually made friends with him and would
swim just above him and tickle him with his lower fin. These are a lot
of questions but I really want him/her to be happy. (I also like to
know whether they are male or female so I can name them). >> Your
eel should be called "fire eel" by its common name. The
peacock spiny eel is another species, that does not have the red lines
on its body. If it is a fire eel, it will get to a very large size,
that means over three feet long, and he will need a tank large enough
to live as he gets older. They do like live food, especially live earth
worms. He should be fine with a knife fish. You may want to make sure
that your temperature is more stable, best between 74 and 80 degrees
Fahrenheit. Good Luck, Oliver
FW Eel 1/16/06 Hi, there! First off, I will begin by
thanking whomever is reading/answering this e-mail. I am a relative
newcomer to keeping FW eels. I currently own two such specimens. One
7" striped peacock eel, and one 4" zig-zag, or tiretrack eel.
I purchased the tiretrack eel from Arizona Aquatic Gardens
(azgardens.com) whose incompetent 'staff' told me that the
zig-zag eel would grow no more than 10" or so. I have found since
that my eel may grow to 3', which poses a dire problem to me. <
Fire eels, Mastacembelus erythrotaenia, gets big, like three feet long.
I have seen them in public aquariums at least that big. But the tire
track eels that I am familiar with, Mastacembelus circumcinctus, stay
around eight inches or so.> <<There are other "tiretrack
eel" species. RMF>> However, there is an even bigger dilemma
I am confronting today: is there such a fish as a dwarf starry night
eel (*Caeco**Mastacembelus spp.), *and what size does such a specimen
attain? Is it a strictly FW fish? What, pray tell, is the recommended
pH and aquarium size of such a specimen? I have tried to Google this
one out, and have even gone through the German and French websites,
with very little success. I am contemplating the purchase, but I am
cautious, as the seller (AAG) states such a specimen will not grow past
6". Is this even possible, in your opinion? Thanks again for
answering my question and I bid you good day. George < While diving
in Lake Tanganyika a few years ago we saw many eels. Some were only 4
inches long and swam like little seahorses while others were at least a
foot long. Look at Caecomastacembelus, Afromastacembelus and
Aethiomastacembelum on fishbase.org. These are the three genera of eels
from Africa. All that I know of get up to a least a foot and a couple
get up to two feet. The Lake Tanganyikan ones require hard alkaline
water with the others probably tolerating almost any kind of water. The
eel you are looking for may be in these groups.-Chuck>
Hello! I have an eel-related
question. Mastacembelid ID, Sys. 7/9/06
Hello! I've been frequenting your site for the last
little while once I started getting fish and realizing that what
the pet stores told me was for the most part completely
wrong. Your site has helped me tremendously with my Fire
Eel (who I've had now for almost 3 months and he's doing
extremely well :-) ) <Ah, good> but I've noticed there is
a general lack of information on the "yellow-tail spiny
eel". <Mmm... is sold under a few other common names...
Most often as the Zig Zag eel on the U.S. west coast... Old
scientific name is Mastacembelus panculus, now Macrognathus
panculus: http://fishbase.sinica.edu.tw/Summary/speciesSummary.php?ID=10147&genusname=Macrognathus&speciesname=pancalus>
I bought one of those about a month ago (he is also doing well, so
whatever breed of eel he is, the care is much the same of that of a
Fire eel.) <Yes> and he's grown a lot. <Good... though
won't get as large... 9 inches is about maximum>
I got him when he was about 2 inches
long. I've looked at various pictures and he seems
to resemble a zig-zag eel? <Ah, yes> Albeit slightly
yellower, perhaps. Anyway, I've included a picture
so perhaps someone can tell me what it is, or if I'm completely
wrong in my thinking that he is a type of zig-zag. Thank
you for your help, and I look forward to hearing from you! -Becki-
<Does appear to be this species to me as well... Can make very
interesting, long-lived pets... given initially healthy specimens,
good care, consistent maintenance and feeding... As with all spiny
eels, do pay particular attention to keeping the top entirely
enclosed to prevent them exiting. Bob Fenner> |
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