brechtvh wrote:I was interested in buying some of those fish, but I read that it is one of the hardest fish to keep.
I don't think they are technically hard to KEEP, but from what I understand, they can be quite hard to settle into an aquarium - I'm not sure what it is they are sensitive to or what lacks in the aquarium, compared to their natural habitat. But once they are settled in captivity, they aren't terribly hard to keep, as far as I can tell.
But they are by no means an easy species to get settled - Jools have tried a couple of times, I think he said, and ended with no survivors.
Love the tank set-up. How large is it? Will there be anything else in the tank (plants or dither fish)? I'm trying to figure out how to decorate my 75 gallon tank (http://www.planetcatfish.com/forum/view ... =5&t=30237). I love how you have flat stones on the floor. Any more tank pics you can share?
@geoff
i know what you mean i guess i got a good mixture ...as three more od even vfour more have heavy bristels so it is perfect.
@mats
the hard part to keep them as i also got L34, is wat i can tell that they sometimes need to get a dose agains amobeas (r what you ever call it...maybe worm in their digestion tract...so i guess just to make sure i will start with a treatment soon as i see that they are eating well...but in my opinion i dont like the anti-worm session much. i'll see
out of 8 or 9 L34 i have 4 left...they are now no problem to keep. i actually never see them during eating...anything...and they are very shy. they measure only about 6cm.
also the bellies are always quite empty as it seems to me. not like a fully well fed ansitrus as we see them usually.
what still surprises me is their breathing-frequence. they breath very fast even after no action at all...
all my tanky are run by airfilters sometimes inkl. a 2500L/h nanostream (tunze)...it doesnt matter...they keep breathing fast...
i still will have to find out about the L255 but until now they are activ and beheaving good.
I just get one L255 about a week ago and I found out this bristle is really a special pleco which i found the difficulty in keeping.
It's been a week i hardly see him eating and it just keep breathing very fast, i did saw him moving his fins works like some kind of ventilation, i start worrying about him for the starving problem, i feed my plecos algae wafers, pallets, some veggie such as a small piece of pumpkin or zucchini every other day; since he neither go to touch the veggie nor the wafers, i even fed him some sinking food for tetras, but still can't see him eating.
I would like to know what is the eating habit of your bristles?
Thank you very much!
heavy breathing in any pleco generally could mean low oxygen or its got gill flukes. I would try maybe adding a powerhead because i hear they live in high oxygenated waters
mine are definately happier in a highly oxygenated swift current type setting. they seem to do ok on courgette and my general shrimp / spirulina / peas / agar mix