Shine a flashlight on your Bristlenose...

All posts regarding the care and breeding of these catfishes from South America.
Post Reply
grimlock3000
Posts: 13
Joined: 08 Sep 2003, 05:44
Location 1: maine, united states

Shine a flashlight on your Bristlenose...

Post by grimlock3000 »

My Bristlenose has a very distinct gold/rust reflection that covers almost its entire body and can only be seen with a flashlight. I found this one night while poking around the tank with a flashlight on a totally unrelated matter. A few other fish appeared to be scratching, so I thought it was Velvet. I began treatment with Maracide. I am on day 5, which should be the last day of treatment, and the Bristlenose still has the rusty reflection. Maybe my fish is not sick? Is this normal? I took a pic of it...

Image[/img]
User avatar
Barbie
Expert
Posts: 2964
Joined: 03 Jan 2003, 23:48
I've donated: $360.00!
My articles: 1
My images: 15
My catfish: 2
My cats species list: 58 (i:2, k:0)
Spotted: 8
Location 1: Spokane, WA
Location 2: USA

Post by Barbie »

It's definitely a natural thing for your bristlenose to have that golden sheen. I have a picture of one in a cave that shows it very well, but danged if I can find the cd its on. If you're treating the tank for just what you saw on him, I would stop immediately and do some 30% water changes daily for a week or so.

Barbie
grimlock3000
Posts: 13
Joined: 08 Sep 2003, 05:44
Location 1: maine, united states

Post by grimlock3000 »

Well, my other fish stopped scratching at least :oops: Time for a midnight water change :roll:

I am going to put some carbon in the tank right away to get the meds out of the water. Thanks for the help!
S. Allen
Posts: 558
Joined: 01 Jan 2003, 01:33
Location 1: Colorado Springs, USA
Interests: Fish: catfish, discus, stingrays. Alcohol: Vodka, Gin, Rum, Beer, Cider. Tobacco: cigars, pipe, hookah/shisha. Dogs, Literature, Music
Contact:

Post by S. Allen »

I believe the sheen is due to very fine, hair-like odontodes, or spines on the scutes. can anyone confirm this?
User avatar
Jools
Expert
Posts: 16141
Joined: 30 Dec 2002, 15:25
My articles: 198
My images: 948
My catfish: 237
My cats species list: 87 (i:237, k:1)
My BLogs: 7 (i:10, p:202)
My Wishlist: 23
Spotted: 450
Location 1: Middle Earth,
Location 2: Scotland
Interests: All things aquatic, Sci-Fi, photography and travel. Oh, and beer.
Contact:

Post by Jools »

S. Allen wrote:I believe the sheen is due to very fine, hair-like odontodes, or spines on the scutes. can anyone confirm this?
Absolutely spot on.

Jools
grimlock3000
Posts: 13
Joined: 08 Sep 2003, 05:44
Location 1: maine, united states

Post by grimlock3000 »

Is there a reason my fish did not have this color before? Maybe it was not mature enough?
S. Allen
Posts: 558
Joined: 01 Jan 2003, 01:33
Location 1: Colorado Springs, USA
Interests: Fish: catfish, discus, stingrays. Alcohol: Vodka, Gin, Rum, Beer, Cider. Tobacco: cigars, pipe, hookah/shisha. Dogs, Literature, Music
Contact:

Post by S. Allen »

that's probably possible, but... are you sure it wasn't there before, and you didn't notice it? the sheen's fairly difficult to see most of the time, unless you're looking for it, on my fish anyway, except the L038...
grimlock3000
Posts: 13
Joined: 08 Sep 2003, 05:44
Location 1: maine, united states

Post by grimlock3000 »

I have shined a flashlight in the tank very frequently in the past while trying to see if my Bristlenose was eating the algae wafers. I have never seen the sheen before, and it was very obvious when I saw it the other night. When I first saw it, my heart sank because I was certain my fish was doomed. The only thing I have done different in the last couple weeks is to stop putting the algae wafers in the tank. I have some green algae in the tank so I figured he can chew on that for a while.
Post Reply

Return to “South American Catfishes (Loricariidae - Plecos et al)”