Help with 30cm catfish identification

Did you know fantastic help is an anagram of Planet Catfish? This forum is for those of you with pictures of your catfish who are looking for help identifying them. There are many here to help and a firm ID is the first step towards keeping your catfish in the best conditions.
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Calypso
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Help with 30cm catfish identification

Post by Calypso »

We have been asked to rehome a large but as yet unidentified catfish. If anyone can help either with the accurate identification and/or the rehoming near Nantwich we would be very very grateful. We have a picture bit have not yet mastered how to upload it to this forum so contact me and I/ll email it to you
Names please to Gerald at the FishOrphans Group :
Gerald@calypso.org.uk
We are also trying to upload it to our website at URL
Image
Last edited by Calypso on 14 Aug 2007, 17:40, edited 2 times in total.
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Post by Marc van Arc »

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Post by ali12345 »

Hi,
Sorry can't help with an accurate id but looks to be a pangasius of some type.
Alison
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Post by Marc van Arc »

Yes, Alison is correct. I too daren't say for sure which exact species it is, but have a look at and see for yourself.
It's not P. nasutus, so you'll have 10 other species left to check.
Or wait for HH, he'll know.
Last edited by Marc van Arc on 14 Aug 2007, 17:54, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by AngelicusFish »

it does look like that a lot.
I have one catfish and it a Pimelodus Pictus.
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Post by Silurus »

Image
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Pangasius hypopthalmus

Post by Calypso »

Pangasius hypopthalmus is the best of the two matches we were advised on so thank you all very much for your lep
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Post by sidguppy »

looks like someone's going to need to fire up the ol' BBQ

I can tell from experience quite recently that these taste great when grilled whole

might seem barbaric, but at least the fish is not going to waste and it'll save it years and years from being kept in way too small tanks and being returned to LFS's again and again and again.
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Post by Bas Pels »

The only reason why i will not BBQ any of my fish, is that I'm allergic to eating it

Look at it this way: If you can provide a fish a good life, untill it reaches a foot of length, but ikt keeps growing, you better eat it, after killing it paiinlesly, than let it suffer
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Eating pets

Post by Calypso »

The last couple of posters on this topic have missed the point. We can and do rehome the vast majority of large and XL fishes we are asked to rehome.
Would you eat your pet dog or cat?

Gerald ( FishOrphans )
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Post by sidguppy »

a pet dog or pet cat is easily housed and easily kept happy

a pet pangasius is not; you'd need a homemade river to keep it properly, as it reaches 3-4 feet and needs a fair current and speciesmembers as well.

a pet dog or pet cat can survive in a house when it's taken care of; a pet pangasius cannot.

I wouldn't eat a dog, not because it's a pet, but because dogs are unclean and spread diseases. for the same reason I would not eat rat, pigeon or cockroach.

but a pet horse that has had a good life, breaks a leg and has to be put down: sure, why not? perfectly well-tasting animal. why let it go to waste?
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Post by grokefish »

I see them too Sid

Matt
One more bucket of water and the farce is complete.
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Missing the point.

Post by Calypso »

The specific Pangasius we have been asked to rehome does not grow to 3-4 feet and the rehoming systems available to us are up to 10,000 gallons (25k litres) so no space problems. It is not injured and does not need to be put down simply because its current owner and original purchaser was ignorant regarding its requirements.
There are laws on Animal husbandry and the associated duty of care for owners in the UK which have recently been revised and now include pet fish - so theoretically you could be prosecuted for killing any fish merely for convenience. It is partly due to this new law that the RSPCA do not take in unwanted fishes any more.
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Post by racoll »

The specific Pangasius we have been asked to rehome does not grow to 3-4 feet
What makes you say this Calypso?


:D
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Re: Eating pets

Post by Marc van Arc »

Calypso wrote: We can and do rehome the vast majority of large and XL fishes we are asked to rehome.
My compliments for doing such a good job.
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Post by racoll »

Calypso wrote:
We can and do rehome the vast majority of large and XL fishes we are asked to rehome.


My compliments for doing such a good job.

Indeed. I am wondering how this is funded?
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The FishOrphans scheme

Post by Calypso »

The FishOrphans scheme is financed partly by public donation but mainly by the nationwide members who all rehome unwanted fishes freely simply because they care about fishes. We only lost about £500 last year so all donations of help or finance are welcomed.
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Post by MatsP »

racoll wrote:
The specific Pangasius we have been asked to rehome does not grow to 3-4 feet
What makes you say this Calypso?


:D
I too would like to know where this information comes from, as if this is correct, then we need to include this information in the Cat-eLog - I've recently checked the current numbers with Fishbase, and if you have some relibale documentation that contradicts Fishbase, then I suppose we'd have to fix it up.

For reference: Here's a list of Pangasiidae in size order. As you can see, there's only two species that don't grow to at least nearly 3 foot - and I suspect those two are at least partly wrong, since this picture of Pangasius macronema

Image

shows a fish noticably longer than the ruler - which seems to be 300mm / 1 ft. Whether this is the world record size fish or not, I don't know.

--
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