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.
Sup all?! I have been reading here a while and i am finnally a member. that out of the way. one quick question: what would be a good location (online preferably) to help id bristle nose? So far in the threads i have been reading the pictures do not resemble mine at all. My bristle nose is quite secretive so snapping a pic w/ my digital has proven quite difficult, mainly because the lighting where he hides/eats is quite dim. I am sure it is male however due to his large mohawk-like arrangement of bristles. i will just give a quick description and suggestions are welcome.
Approx 4" long very dark brown/green. Large array on a head that is flat and very rounded, the actual front is domed and elongated. he likes to root around in the substrate. No spots on the fish just a very small white tip on dorsal fin, and very small white tip on tail fin.
i hope these help i couldnt find one in the cat-e-log....i want to breed him i like his personality. my lfs owner said he could prolly get me what i want or i could order i am just lookin for a scientific name i guess. thanks!!
see how mine has less defined pattern, than barbie's? that is where i was getting frustrated/lost b/c he shows many traits of one but some of another. for example sp 7 or 8 i cant remember has too elaborate of a bristle array. but at the same time an argument could be presented that my fish is in the adolence stage and darkens himself when he leaves the driftwood cave to feed (when i can coax him out) which would lessen the pattern appearance topically (i guess). i am considering going back to my buddy's store 2morrow and looking through his stock records during the time period in which i puchased my fish and try and get a taxonomy.
keep the suggestions and thoughts flowing i will keep updated.
Bristle "array" is linked directly to dominance factors. My male is the dominant male in his tank, and a few years old. Two males in the same tank will have very different "plumage", due to one being submissive at times. Depth of coloration also can't be used as identifying factor, since they can literally change that in second. You have to go by patterning, and body shape, where the eyes are positioned, how the fins attach and so on.