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.
this youngster is very beautiful in colouration. unfortunately these colours disappear when the fish ages.
this one is from the genus Pterygoplichthys as it has more then 10 dorsal fin rays. young fish are sometimes a bit difficult to identify, but it might be
Although I got both Pt gibbyceps and punctata, I can not tell whether you got one of them, because I never saw a Pt gibbyceps at ~1 inch, the size your fishes are
Perhaps that is in fact the clue: assuming gibbyceps is not sold at 1 inch, and punctata is, you should have gotten punctata.
Be glad with them, they are not als colorfull as gibbyceps, but they remain much smaller:
after 1 year, most of my gibbys were around 20 cm. At 3 years they are nearly 40 cm. I got one at 20 years, it is naerly 50 cm
I got my punctatus now 3 years, and would estimate their size at 15 cm
both groupes are 6 fishes, all houded groupwise for 1 year and than individually
Whoa, thanks guys. I didn't know about the number of rays. I checked out the Pterygoplichthys pages and some of the juvenile pics on the weberi page look like a dead ringer. I've been looking through hundreds of pics before, but if you don't know what you're looking for, it's a needle in a haystack. I hope he'll turn out to be the smaller kind. I don't want to have to return him when he gets too big, which is what I was offered at my LFS (otherwise I would not have taken him).
- but that's not to say that some other similar looking fish can't be sold under the same name, e.g. P. weberiMats
And I'm pretty sure I looked at that picture before and thought 'That looks nothing like mine', but only now that I looked at its cousins and saw how different the juvenile weberis look from the adults, did I think to google for some juvenile punctatus pics. Found some on scotcat, and they also look similar to mine. I feel a bit silly now. Can I chalk that up under beginner mistake?
The description (linked in the P. weberi cat-elog page) says that they don't overlap, and I suspect that any fish coming out of Peru would be P. weberi, rather than P. puncatus, judging from the distribution map of the two - so it's quite possible that any fish sold as "Ranger pleco" is actually P. weberi - this species was only recently described, so it may well be that earlier specimens were misidentified.
[That's just what I think - you read for yourself, and if you think different, please say so].
I do think the pics of the weberi look a little more like mine. So I'm assuming for now that that's what I have and keep my fingers crossed he doesn't grow too big.