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.
Is this an l66, as i have been told, or has the store accidentally mislabeled it?
Also, whatever this species is, can you also sex it, interested in breeding
I have several plecos and the l66 is one of them I will get a pic and send it to you if I can pretty timid so a pic may be hard to do but it looks just like the pic you have. These are great to breed and demand is still pretty good.
usually I don't write anything if the discussion is about ID'ing wormlined Hypancistrus.
The first replies says it's not L 66, the second one that it looks like one and you are happy to have the answer you wanted to have...
My personal opinion is that the pleco is too young to ID and the picture is not really good enough either.
There are certainly many people that are better in ID'ing Hypancistrus than me, perhaps even one of the tw guys that have already answered but I have strong doubts...
Or to cite an old Greek "I know that I don't know".
So what you're saying is that I should wait for a couple weeks for what species this is to get older?
That would make sense, around how old should it be to determine species and sex?
Most Hypancistrus are omnivores or carnivores. The foods you listed are fine. I feed mine live blackworms and frozen bloodworms in addition to algae wafers and pellets.
Identifying wormlined Hypancistrus is quite difficult. But it is definitely easier when they are larger. A photo from the side and from above is generally required for even getting close to ID.
I have bloodworms, the problem is that my rainbows just destroy everything that touches the surface, and the bloodworms don't really sink for a while unless I tap them.
Should I just drop them in at lights off and hope that he/she finds it?