S. dhonti
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S. dhonti
is there a way to tell from a picture the differences between Tanganyika Syno's? S. dhonti is much higher priced than S. multipunctatus. Just wondering if there's a huge difference in the 2 and why the price difference. Thanks in advance.
- Silurus
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- sidguppy
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S dhonti is rare in the trade.
it's usually a by-catch if an LFS gets a box with unsorted Syno's from the lake.
youngsters can "hide" in shipments of petricola or polli, but differ quite a bit from multipunctatus, wich lessens the chances of them being a by-catch with those.
when very young (2" or smaller) they're next to impossible to separate from polli, tanganicae etc; unless you're very experienced and know where to look for characteristics.
It's a very peaceful fish; much more so than petricola or polli; shy too.
it gets really big; but for some reason unknown to me; captive specimen tend to stop growing at 5-7" or so; unless imported at a larger size.
I've yet to see a dhonti without spots; they're supposed to loose them as adults.
the biggest dhonti I've ever seen was about 8-9" and still quite spotty.
One give-away: turn them over! multipunctatus are unique among tangies with an unspotted belly.....
it's usually a by-catch if an LFS gets a box with unsorted Syno's from the lake.
youngsters can "hide" in shipments of petricola or polli, but differ quite a bit from multipunctatus, wich lessens the chances of them being a by-catch with those.
when very young (2" or smaller) they're next to impossible to separate from polli, tanganicae etc; unless you're very experienced and know where to look for characteristics.
It's a very peaceful fish; much more so than petricola or polli; shy too.
it gets really big; but for some reason unknown to me; captive specimen tend to stop growing at 5-7" or so; unless imported at a larger size.
I've yet to see a dhonti without spots; they're supposed to loose them as adults.
the biggest dhonti I've ever seen was about 8-9" and still quite spotty.
One give-away: turn them over! multipunctatus are unique among tangies with an unspotted belly.....
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The top photo above is S. tanganaicae, the bottom is S. dhonti. Armke's has many misidentified Synodontis on their website, beware.
Here are two photos of S. dhonti losing their spots. It is a very slow transition. I have had these specimens for almost two years and they have grown about 1/2 inch in that period. The first photo is of an 8 inch specimen, the bottom photo is of a 6 inch specimen:
These photos were taken in a tank with very low lighting to increase Synodontis activity. The photos were taken with a Canon 20D dSLR at ISO 3200 with no flash to keep from scaring them away. As you can see they are quite noisy with flat colors.
Here are two photos of S. dhonti losing their spots. It is a very slow transition. I have had these specimens for almost two years and they have grown about 1/2 inch in that period. The first photo is of an 8 inch specimen, the bottom photo is of a 6 inch specimen:
These photos were taken in a tank with very low lighting to increase Synodontis activity. The photos were taken with a Canon 20D dSLR at ISO 3200 with no flash to keep from scaring them away. As you can see they are quite noisy with flat colors.
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