The Greatest Pleco Escape!
- Shane
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The Greatest Pleco Escape!
Just over a month ago I placed several plecos in a 15 gallon on my top rack shelf to have them ready to take to a friend in Maryland. Early in the morning, I started packing up the fish and was surprised that I was missing a large L 238. I got on my hands and knees and checked the floor and figured the fish must have somehow escaped even though the tank had a cover. I was gone for a week and when I came back I looked again but could not find the fish. I figured the maid must have found the body and threw it out.
Today I was breaking down a rocky Mexican fish biotope with a medium-sezed cichlid as the sole remaining resident. I fed this tank lightly as it only had one fish. It was also unheated and filled with Mexican tap water (very high pH and hard). As I started taking out the stones, I found the L 238! Happy and looking to be in very good health.
There are several things that make this amazing. 1) The tank it escaped had a lid, 2) The tank it ended up in was not directly below the tank it escaped from, but two feet over... and it had a lid as well! 3) The fish moved from a tropical (80F) tank with RO water to an unheated tank (74F) with hard, high pH water with nothing in between and lived. Not to mention I have no idea what it was eating for the last month.
I really would not have believed this if I had not seen it.
The 15 gallon, with a blue background, is now on the left hand side where the 10 gallon with the spawning pot is in this photo. The fish ended up in the 20 gallon on the middle shelf at right with the coconut shell. Both tanks had glass covers with no more than 1 inch open along the back for the filter.
-Shane
Today I was breaking down a rocky Mexican fish biotope with a medium-sezed cichlid as the sole remaining resident. I fed this tank lightly as it only had one fish. It was also unheated and filled with Mexican tap water (very high pH and hard). As I started taking out the stones, I found the L 238! Happy and looking to be in very good health.
There are several things that make this amazing. 1) The tank it escaped had a lid, 2) The tank it ended up in was not directly below the tank it escaped from, but two feet over... and it had a lid as well! 3) The fish moved from a tropical (80F) tank with RO water to an unheated tank (74F) with hard, high pH water with nothing in between and lived. Not to mention I have no idea what it was eating for the last month.
I really would not have believed this if I had not seen it.
The 15 gallon, with a blue background, is now on the left hand side where the 10 gallon with the spawning pot is in this photo. The fish ended up in the 20 gallon on the middle shelf at right with the coconut shell. Both tanks had glass covers with no more than 1 inch open along the back for the filter.
-Shane
"My journey is at an end and the tale is told. The reader who has followed so faithfully and so far, they have the right to ask, what do I bring back? It can be summed up in three words. Concentrate upon Uganda."
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
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Shane,
Talk about "accessory breathing apparatus" and "adaptability." This story pales in comparison. This was about a year ago or so. I have a bad habit of overfilling tanks. Never did this come back to bite me more than here:
I don't know what made me get the camera. I was trying to unplug the filter with my foot. But, when you have little sensation in your feet, it's kind of difficult to find the plug. He never made it to the impeller, luckily. There was a lot of yummy stuff in there, plus the moving water. Getting him out was not fun. Oh, did I learn a lot. He hasn't made it back into the filter yet, but I see him trying on a daily basis. He also comes out of the water to feed on whatever is on the glass(like the duckweed in the photos).
Amanda
Talk about "accessory breathing apparatus" and "adaptability." This story pales in comparison. This was about a year ago or so. I have a bad habit of overfilling tanks. Never did this come back to bite me more than here:
I don't know what made me get the camera. I was trying to unplug the filter with my foot. But, when you have little sensation in your feet, it's kind of difficult to find the plug. He never made it to the impeller, luckily. There was a lot of yummy stuff in there, plus the moving water. Getting him out was not fun. Oh, did I learn a lot. He hasn't made it back into the filter yet, but I see him trying on a daily basis. He also comes out of the water to feed on whatever is on the glass(like the duckweed in the photos).
Amanda
- Shane
- Expert
- Posts: 4625
- Joined: 30 Dec 2002, 22:12
- My articles: 69
- My images: 161
- My catfish: 75
- My cats species list: 4 (i:75, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 5 (i:5)
- Spotted: 99
- Location 1: Tysons
- Location 2: Virginia
- Contact:
Amanda,
I have seen the same behavior several times. The only time it was ever a problem was when a large Chaetostoma lodged him/herself under the biowheel and actually stopped it. The overflow could not handle the backwash and about two gallons of the tank flooded out of the filter onto the floor before I figured out the problem. The fish was fine.
-Shane
I have seen the same behavior several times. The only time it was ever a problem was when a large Chaetostoma lodged him/herself under the biowheel and actually stopped it. The overflow could not handle the backwash and about two gallons of the tank flooded out of the filter onto the floor before I figured out the problem. The fish was fine.
-Shane
"My journey is at an end and the tale is told. The reader who has followed so faithfully and so far, they have the right to ask, what do I bring back? It can be summed up in three words. Concentrate upon Uganda."
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
Winston Churchill, My African Journey
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- Posts: 2198
- Joined: 31 Aug 2004, 16:01
- I've donated: $100.00!
- My articles: 6
- My images: 13
- My cats species list: 17 (i:0, k:0)
- My aquaria list: 7 (i:7)
- Spotted: 6
- Location 1: Sharon, Massachusetts, US