What can I feed Synodontis Dhonti?

All posts regarding the care and breeding of catfishes from Africa.
Post Reply
User avatar
jolly_polli
Posts: 19
Joined: 12 Jan 2004, 13:03
Location 1: Brabant, Netherlands

What can I feed Synodontis Dhonti?

Post by jolly_polli »

Hi,

Has anyone experience in keeping S. Dhonti and what do you feed them?
I have 5 of them for 6 months now, one is aprox. 15 cm the others 12 cm and at this moment they are swimming in a tank (720 liter) with Tropheus and are living of Spirulina.
In a few months I want to place them in another tank with frontosa's will this be a problem with food or in any other way?

Greetings Gijs
Tanganyika, "It's a kind of Magic".
Rusty
Posts: 682
Joined: 30 Dec 2002, 14:51
Location 1: New York, NY
Interests: Mochokidae, Clariidae, Heteropneustidae, Malapteruridae, Chacidae, Cetopsidae, Bagridae, Amphilidae
Contact:

Post by Rusty »

No, won't be a problem. I have several, and they eat anything that will fit in their mouths, and occasionally things that will not. Fishing an oversized piece of shrimp out of a squirming fishes' gullet is not a fun experience.

Rusty
User avatar
jolly_polli
Posts: 19
Joined: 12 Jan 2004, 13:03
Location 1: Brabant, Netherlands

Post by jolly_polli »

Fishing an oversized piece of shrimp out of a squirming fishes' gullet is not a fun experience.
Thanks Rusty,

I will take care in what to feed them when they are with the Frontosa's

Greetings Gijs
Tanganyika, "It's a kind of Magic".
User avatar
Dinyar
Posts: 1286
Joined: 31 Dec 2002, 00:34
My articles: 3
My images: 227
My catfish: 10
My cats species list: 3 (i:0, k:0)
Spotted: 94
Location 1: New York, NY, USA
Interests: Mochokidae, Claroteidae, Bagridae, Malepteruridae, Chacidae, Heteropneustidae, Clariidae, Sisoridae, Loricariiadae

Post by Dinyar »

While S. dhonti enjoys meaty foods, as Rusty indicated, they have a surprising appetite for veggies. Unlike say S. polli, they enjoy things like fresh cucumber.

Also surprisingly (in light of their large adult size and the growth rates of most other Synos), they grow very slowly. In general, we find that Tang Synos grow much more slowly than riverine Synos. I wonder why? Any ideas out there?

Dinyar
User avatar
sidguppy
Posts: 3827
Joined: 18 Jan 2004, 12:26
My articles: 1
My images: 28
My aquaria list: 5 (i:0)
Spotted: 9
Location 1: Southern Netherlands near Belgium
Location 2: Noord Brabant, Netherlands
Interests: African catfishes and oddballs, Madagascar cichlids; stoner doom and heavy rock; old school choppers and riding them, fantasy novels, travelling and diving in the tropics and all things nature.
Contact:

Post by sidguppy »

perhaps because they involved in a cichlid-infested lake and went for being extremely tough and longlived instead of breeding like rabbits and growing fast?

but it's weird indeed.
you can buy a 1,5" eupterus, and within a year and a half, it's a 7-8" fat monster.

no way you're going to re-create that with a baby multipunc or a 3" juvenile granny......

not to mention recordbreakers like petricola, 'polli white' etc who take years to reach a mere 2" from hatching.
Valar Morghulis
Post Reply

Return to “African Catfishes”