Hillstream look-alike feeding
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Hillstream look-alike feeding
Smiling Loachists,
I've collected a local lump-fish/sucker bellied goby ... i'd have to look up the appropriate name (it's on fishbase, but i'm lazy just now)... in very fast water, and it's a dead ringer for many of the fast-water loach photos i've seen here.... but without the brilliant colours.
Thus my question to the forum:
It's not losing weight (that i can tell) but it is very timmid, though the spp isn't supposed to be nocturnal or schooling. Any suggestings for helping it get over its "wall flower" reluctance to mingle or feed?
The mouth is directly to the front and not of a sucker/algevoire style, so floating/swimming particulate foods would be the diet, as fishbase suggests. It sticks via modified pelvic fins like the other gobies, though they do eat algae.... i should send some photos.
I've got it in with the other gobies and pipefish from the same and similar rivers, along with the musketeers (little clowns x 3) and a few other small spp in a 100 gal long/show with about a 2-10cm/second circular current (with refugia).
If it begins to obviously loose weight it's going back... no worries.
Andyroo
I've collected a local lump-fish/sucker bellied goby ... i'd have to look up the appropriate name (it's on fishbase, but i'm lazy just now)... in very fast water, and it's a dead ringer for many of the fast-water loach photos i've seen here.... but without the brilliant colours.
Thus my question to the forum:
It's not losing weight (that i can tell) but it is very timmid, though the spp isn't supposed to be nocturnal or schooling. Any suggestings for helping it get over its "wall flower" reluctance to mingle or feed?
The mouth is directly to the front and not of a sucker/algevoire style, so floating/swimming particulate foods would be the diet, as fishbase suggests. It sticks via modified pelvic fins like the other gobies, though they do eat algae.... i should send some photos.
I've got it in with the other gobies and pipefish from the same and similar rivers, along with the musketeers (little clowns x 3) and a few other small spp in a 100 gal long/show with about a 2-10cm/second circular current (with refugia).
If it begins to obviously loose weight it's going back... no worries.
Andyroo
"I can eat 50 eggs !"
- Martin Thoene
- Posts: 11186
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2005 5:38 am
- Location: Toronto.....Actually, I've been on LOL since September 1998
This?
http://filaman.ifm-geomar.de/Country/Co ... ies=banana
Love the name!
Looks rather like a Moosehead
Martin.
http://filaman.ifm-geomar.de/Country/Co ... ies=banana
Love the name!

Looks rather like a Moosehead
Martin.

- Graeme Robson
- Posts: 9096
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2005 4:34 am
- Location: Peterborough, UK
- Contact:
Nope,
That one they call a sandfish (same as the one below on the list, similar spp). I've had one before, but they are difficult to feed as they eat... well, sand. They power through mountains of it through the gills. I reckon my sand/substrate may be old/mature enough to hold one now. They're reasonably common. Folks eat them.
The fish in question is a clingfish, on fishbase at:
http://filaman.ifm-geomar.de/Country/Co ... cies=nudus
though i can get better photos then this. As i'd said, it's a dead ringer in looks, habitat and likely behaviour to many of the hillstream loaches (I love convergant evolution)...thus i ask advice here.
Mine's about 3cm long... i've never seen one anywhere near 15 cm. Seems monsterous.
Mouth is little... too little to be a serious fish eater. Can see it in the through-glass photo.
If interested, the other river gobies are at:
http://filaman.ifm-geomar.de/Country/Co ... =punctatum
Similar to the Thai gobies i've seen on this forum, though withoiut the flash colours.... but as i'd said on another posting every river has a quite different spp: colours, sizes, patterns etc... Again, i can get better photos.
And yes Graeme, this is the gobie collection that would be subject to the clown knife. I've turned it down :(
Andyroo
That one they call a sandfish (same as the one below on the list, similar spp). I've had one before, but they are difficult to feed as they eat... well, sand. They power through mountains of it through the gills. I reckon my sand/substrate may be old/mature enough to hold one now. They're reasonably common. Folks eat them.
The fish in question is a clingfish, on fishbase at:
http://filaman.ifm-geomar.de/Country/Co ... cies=nudus
though i can get better photos then this. As i'd said, it's a dead ringer in looks, habitat and likely behaviour to many of the hillstream loaches (I love convergant evolution)...thus i ask advice here.
Mine's about 3cm long... i've never seen one anywhere near 15 cm. Seems monsterous.
Mouth is little... too little to be a serious fish eater. Can see it in the through-glass photo.
If interested, the other river gobies are at:
http://filaman.ifm-geomar.de/Country/Co ... =punctatum
Similar to the Thai gobies i've seen on this forum, though withoiut the flash colours.... but as i'd said on another posting every river has a quite different spp: colours, sizes, patterns etc... Again, i can get better photos.
And yes Graeme, this is the gobie collection that would be subject to the clown knife. I've turned it down :(
Andyroo
"I can eat 50 eggs !"
- Graeme Robson
- Posts: 9096
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2005 4:34 am
- Location: Peterborough, UK
- Contact:
- Graeme Robson
- Posts: 9096
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2005 4:34 am
- Location: Peterborough, UK
- Contact:
Have been through the usual: chopped small table shrimp, hard boiled egg yolk (dried), ant eggs, earthworms are oddly hard to get. Not too common, and the little old gardener ladies know what i'm up to and are fiercely protective.
The bits float in the current right in front of hi nose, but no takers. It's not loosing weight, so it may be finding enough juv. shrimp and snails etc...
Andyroo
The bits float in the current right in front of hi nose, but no takers. It's not loosing weight, so it may be finding enough juv. shrimp and snails etc...
Andyroo
"I can eat 50 eggs !"
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