Shane wrote: ↑27 Oct 2021, 10:51
My own two cents is not to put them in as a known described sp. I would add them as Ancistrus sp # and note the trade name they were imported under and that they may be one of the described spp from that drainage but we can't make offer a definitive identification without verified provenience information.
-Shane
Jools wrote: ↑27 Oct 2021, 10:06
That really does help, is that the same fish as the pic we used (perhaps that was the female)?
Jools
New photos.
This is the female underbelly. No markings on her
And the male. What's interesting is his blending colour change... on wood he's dark but on sand he gets reticulated spots on him.
And video of the female
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 19 Dec 2021, 08:58
by Fishmandavew
Just one point to note, as I know it is happening here. Stores (and I accidentally) have found that if they breed male cirrhosis with female l044a it produces brown fish with a much stronger reticulated pattern. Just what we need, more bn types (not), although I am confident this is not what you have.
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 19 Dec 2021, 09:01
by Fishmandavew
Apologies, put l044a meaning the blue eyed lemon we call l144a ( albeit not the original)
Alright, digging this up, as they've been doing great. Probably my favorite ancistrus by far. They're just so docile compared to my cf cirrhosis lol very mild mannered fish, get along fantastic with my farlowella and l240 as well as the cories and Bolivian ram.
But, wanted to share updated photos. Female has not changed in appearance at all. Male, he's developed beautifully, he's got a really beautiful red-gold shine to him, and fine spotted fins when they're flared open. Even some red tones in the fins too.
Male:
Female:
Bekateen, do these compare to the fish you purchased as "bodenhameri"?
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 15 Nov 2022, 09:04
by Jools
As a total aside, did you know there are now two species of
He's not the most cooperative fish for photos. Ironically he gets excited when he sees the phone so doesn't sit still. Does this cute little head shaking to my phone and my finger.
We had another, but this guy apparently didn't like them and it didn't end well. So stays solo, doesn't seem to mind.
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 15 Nov 2022, 13:14
by Jools
MissNoodle wrote: ↑15 Nov 2022, 09:16Wasn't aware of this, no!
20221109_181645.jpg
I am not certain, as your fish maybe has a bit of growing to do, but I'm leaning towards you fish being the new species. Check out
Male has been staking out caves, been kicking my L240 out of his cave, so I added lots more for them to pick from, and since he's staked claim to the smallest one and the female has also begun showing interest in him in the cave.
Photo of him stealing the old cave from my L240 lol
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 03 Feb 2023, 03:22
by MissNoodle
And eggs.
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 03 Feb 2023, 04:11
by bekateen
Excellent! Congratulations!
Cheers, Eric
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 18 Mar 2023, 00:04
by MissNoodle
Photos from the first week:
And most recent, today, at 41 days old:
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 16 Aug 2023, 12:46
by Jools
I'd like to revisit this again. If I've got it right we have this species in the cat-elog as
- but the pics don't look quite like the one pictured? If so, while not assigning it to a described species, what do we think about calling it A. aff. bodenhameri?
Jools
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 16 Aug 2023, 15:32
by bekateen
Jools wrote: ↑16 Aug 2023, 12:46
I'd like to revisit this again. If I've got it right we have this species in the cat-elog as
- but the pics don't look quite like the one pictured? If so, while not assigning it to a described species, what do we think about calling it A. aff. bodenhameri?
Jools
Hi Jools,
No this is the wrong fish. Except for the lack of abdominal mottling, these do look similar to
are my fish, which my LFS imported from Petra Aqua as Ancistrus bodenhameri, but bears no resemblance to the original description of A. bodenhameri. My fish look like the fish we've called here
Here's a more recent baby pic if that helps at all
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 17 Aug 2023, 00:36
by bekateen
Casscats wrote: ↑17 Aug 2023, 00:23
Here's a more recent baby pic if that helps at all
20230814_223645.jpg
Now that looks very much like my fish, except that it's what my ADULT fish look like, and even after all these months, my adults are still only 5-6cm SL. And my fish, juvies and adults, are distinctly green irridescent.
Casscats wrote: ↑17 Aug 2023, 00:23
Here's a more recent baby pic if that helps at all
20230814_223645.jpg
Now that looks very much like my fish, except that it's what my ADULT fish look like, and even after all these months, my adults are still only 5-6cm SL. And my fish, juvies and adults, are distinctly green irridescent.
Casscats, how long are your largest adults?
Cheers, Eric
The male looks to be about 3-3.5 inches (8-9cm SL) nose to base of caudal. Maybe 4-4.5inch with tail.
Here's a photo of him recently with a mature sterbai in the background for size reference. One thing that stands apart on mine is they have the white tips on the tail and dorsal as a mature adult too.
The female is about 1 inch smaller.
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 18 Aug 2023, 07:37
by aquaholic
About thirty years ago there were Bushy Nose Plecos - (Ancistris spp) in Australia that had very long and double branched, possibly triple branched bristles. A huge mass of pronounced impressive headgear. Some of the older text books and fish magazines might have examples. Australia would follow world wide fish trends back then. Unfortunately they were hybridised out of existence here and no longer available. I haven't seen any in my overseas travels either. I'd be very interested to find someone breeding or collecting a similar strain again. Keen enough to fly over to collect them (preferably small). I'd pay top dollar for these.
Casscats wrote: ↑17 Aug 2023, 00:23
Here's a more recent baby pic if that helps at all
20230814_223645.jpg
Now that looks very much like my fish, except that it's what my ADULT fish look like, and even after all these months, my adults are still only 5-6cm SL. And my fish, juvies and adults, are distinctly green irridescent.
Casscats, how long are your largest adults?
Cheers, Eric
Some updated photos
Juvenile with light camouflage pattern on leaf litter... the red tones are interesting
Juvenile with father on a rock, and father individually.
The gold shine on the adults seem really unique, my domestics do not show the same gold shine.
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 05 Nov 2023, 04:06
by DBam
Great looking fish. If you're west coast Canada I'll definitely buy some off you if you do look to sell off juveniles.
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 05 Nov 2023, 05:25
by Casscats
DBam wrote: ↑05 Nov 2023, 04:06
Great looking fish. If you're west coast Canada I'll definitely buy some off you if you do look to sell my juveniles.
I'm all the way out in Ontario, quite a way aways. And I have a home lined up for the juvies already, still holding on to them until the person is in town.
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 25 Nov 2023, 03:33
by Casscats
Interestingly the male has grown an inch since I got them.
The fry are still showing a red tone, but interestingly so does the female when on substrate!
Male, female, and one of the fry
Is there possibility of these fish being ancistrus sp. Columbia listed on your site? The spots look quite similar to these fish when on light substrate.
No, not either. Both have very distinctive patterns on their caudal fin which are absent in your fish. Also, I have spawned lots of A. triradiatus and the fry never show the distinctive markings yours show.
I am realizing we need to add fry photos to the Catelog where possible as in some Ancistrus their coloration and patterning is quite unique when young. This can be helpful when trying to sort spp that lack distinctive traits in adulthood.
-Shane
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 25 Nov 2023, 18:35
by Casscats
Fry photos would be really fantastic.
And mouth closeups of all of them too would be another great option since my understanding is the mouth shape varies among species too.
Man, I wish I had more info from the supplier. The lfs just labeled them cucuta pleco and that was that. Owner netting me the fish didn't know/care how to tell male from female, so I doubt I'd have gotten any further info from him. For all I know, they may not even be from that area at all and they're just grasping for names
(They have labeled corydoras elegans as Peruvian blue corydoras, if that matters much for how far they reach for names)
Casscats wrote: ↑17 Aug 2023, 00:23
Here's a more recent baby pic if that helps at all
20230814_223645.jpg
Now that looks very much like my fish, except that it's what my ADULT fish look like, and even after all these months, my adults are still only 5-6cm SL. And my fish, juvies and adults, are distinctly green irridescent.
Casscats, how long are your largest adults?
Cheers, Eric
Hi bekateen I managed to get an on glass measurement of my adult male.
Seems to be about 7.5cm SL
Very very faint spots on the sides near the pectoral fins but otherwise plain brown below.
Re: Pleco Identification
Posted: 29 Jan 2024, 19:26
by HarryPotter69
It sounds like you've got a keen eye for detail when it comes to identifying fish species! Those distinctive patterns on the caudal fin are definitely helpful clues. Adding fry photos to the catalog is a great idea SEO