Description:
Dorsal spines (total): 1; Dorsal soft rays (total):
5 - 5; Anal soft rays: 10 - 11. The body is a little
elongated, without scales, with one lateral range
of bony plaque. The head is large and flattened. Mouth
terminal, and has three pairs of barbels. Eyes are
small. Abundant in calm waters of swamps and mangroves.
Active at night, lies hidden in the underwater roots
and stocks during the day. Every basic unit of the
sound they emit when they move their pectoral spine
lasts 100-200 milliseconds with a frequency of 170-250
Hertz. Aquarium Care: Wherever possible
it is recommend that the aquarist keep these catfish
in small groups of four to six specimens, assuming
that they are available in these numbers; failing
this Acanthodoras cataphractus are quite
happy to shoal with other members of the family Doradidae.
In their natural habitat they would be found in very
large shoals. They are ideally suited to being kept
in a community aquarium environment with other medium
to large species of fish such as Bleeding Heart Tetras,
Emperor Tetras and other catfish. The main thing to
remember is that these catfish have quite a large
mouth and are capable of eating any fish small enough
to fit inside. Diet: Omnivorous,
feeds mainly on organic wastes. Searches for food
by digging in the sediment. In the aquarium as with
all the other doradids, Acanthodoras cataphractus
is omnivorous and readily accepts a mixed and varied
diet which they search through the substrate for.
Sinking catfish pellets, good quality flake foods,
granular foods, cultured whiteworm, earthworms, aquatic
snails which they relish and frozen foods such as
bloodworm.
Common
Name:
Spiny catfish
Synonyms:
Silurus cataphractus, Cataphractus
americanus, Doras blochii, D.brunnescens, D.castaneoventris,
Callichthys asper
Family:
Doradidae
Distribution:
South America:
Amazon River basin and coastal drainages of French
Guiana, Guyana and Surinam.
Size:
15.0cm. (6ins)
Temp:
22-26°C (71-79°F)
p.H.
6.0-7.5.
Reference:
Froese, R. and D. Pauly.
Editors. 2009. FishBase. World Wide Web electronic
publication. www.fishbase.org, version (02/2010).
ScotCat
Factsheet: no.
140. Feb. 2008.
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