Your Email:
Get the latest news, tips and
free advice every month
Which of these fish would you be most interested in learning about?
Freshwater
African Jewelfish
Angelfish
Bala Shark
Barb
Betta
Black Tetra
Bleeding Heart Tetra
Blind Cave Tetra
Blue Gourami
Bronze Cory
Buenos Aires Tetra
Cardinal Tetra
Catfish
Cherry Barb
Cichlid
Clown Barb
Clown Loach
Convict Cichlid
Cory
Danio
Diamond Tetra
Discus
Dwarf Gourami
Firemouth
Glass Catfish
Glowlight Tetra
Goldfish
Gourami
Guppy
Hatchetfish
Head And Tail Light Tetra
Jack Dempsey
Jewelfish
Kissing Gourami
Kribensis
Kuhli Loach
Lemon Tetra
Livebearer
Loach
Long-Fin Swordtail
Marbled Hatchetfish
Molly
Montezuma Swordtail
Neon Tetra
Orange-Finned Loach
Oscar
Otocinclus
Paradisefish
Pearl Gourami
Peppered Cory
Platy
Plecostomus or Pleco
Rainbowfish
Ram
Red-Tailed Shark
Redtail Botia
Rosy Barb
Siamese Fighting Fish
Silver Dollar
Skunk Cory
Swordtail
Tetra
Three-Spot Gourami
Tiger Barb
Tiger-Banded Peckoltia
Tropheus moorii
Upside-Down Catfish
White Cloud
Zebra Danio

Saltwater
Achilles Tang
Angelfish
Anthias
Banggai Cardinal
Blue Devil
Bluespotted Boxfish
Boxfish
Butterflyfish
Cardinalfish
Clownfish
Damselfish
Domino Damsel
Eel
Firefish
Frogfish
Goby
Green Chromis
Grouper
Hawkfish
Hippo Tang
Jawfish
Lionfish
Longhorned Cowfish
Lyretail Anthias
Marine Comet
Maroon Clown
Naso Tang
Pajama Cardinal
Peach Anthias
Percula Clown
Porcupine Puffer
Powder Blue Tang
Pufferfish
Rabbitfish
Royal Gramma
Seahorse
Soldierfish
Squarespot Anthias
Squirrelfish
Surgeonfish
Tang
Threadfin Anthias
Triggerfish
Wrasse
Yellow Tang
Yellowtail Damsel

Plant
Alternanthera reineckii
Anubias species
Bacopa caroliniana
Ceratopteris cornuta
Cryptocoryne species
Echinodorus 'aquaritica'
Echinodorus 'Oriental'
Echinodorus 'Red Diamond'
Echinodorus angustifolia
Echinodorus parviflorus 'Tropica'
Echinodorus species
Egeria densa
Hygrophila species
Limnophila aromatica
Ludwigia repens
Marsilea hirsute
Microsorum pteropus
Rotala indica (rotundifolia)
Vallisneria spiralis
Vesicularia dubyana


Printer Friendly Bookmark and Share

Catfish Compatibility

What catfish are compatible?

By Ginny Eckstein

Q. After several years of keeping tropical fish, I began to feel that I understood reasonably well what fish could live together successfully. At least I no longer purchase small neon tetras to live with my adult angelfish. Recently I've taken a great interest in catfish of all kinds. Quite frankly, I feel like a beginning aquarist all over again. If the catfish get along with my other tropical fish, they don't get along with each other and vice versa. How can I tell what fish are going to be compatible? The method I'm currently using of course, missing fish or dead (sometimes near dead) catfish, is clearly not satisfactory. Help!

A. Isn't the tropical fish hobby always a challenge? Seriously, I can understand your frustration. It's reflected in many of the letters I receive. So where do I begin? My first thought is aquarium size. You didn't mention what size aquarium you're having your catfish problems in. This is a very important consideration with any territorial tropical fish, not just catfish. A problem in a 10-gallon or 20-gallon aquarium may not be a problem in a 55-gallon or 125-gallon aquarium

The need for space and/or territory is probably a basic animal instinct. (Have you ever felt the need to sit up straight in a crowded bus so as not to be touching the person sitting next to you?...episodic claustrophobia.) In the confines of an aquarium, it's not easy for fish to avoid each other — the fish can only swim away so far. Providing sufficient hiding places, such as caves, plants, driftwood, flowerpots and pieces of PVC pipe, will add to the fish's sense of security.

Many auchenipterids (driftwood catfish) and doradids (talking catfish) will "squeeze" together into the same refuge. I'd like to note that caution should be exercised in your choice of shelters. I learned this the hard way when I lost a beautiful black lancer (Bagrichthys hypselopterus) that became trapped in a commercially available plastic log. I knew, and the manufacturer knew, that fish were supposed to enter and leave the log from either end. The additional smaller holes in the log were for decoration or perhaps small fish. The black lancer didn't know this and got his head and one pectoral fin through the small opening, with eventually fatal consequences.

It is best to provide more hiding places then you think you need, because not all catfish families are tolerant of members of their own species. A 220-gallon aquarium in my fish room has become too small to accommodate four Synodontis angelicus catfish that grew up together. After five years of compatibility, two of the fish had to be removed from the tank in an attempt to save their lives (one subsequently died). Bite marks were scattered on their sides, and in the vent area "chunks" of flesh had been removed by the dominant angelicus. Synodontis catfish have effective teeth and will use them!

Assuming that you can provide sufficient room for your new catfish acquisitions, what else must you consider? Tropical fish grow. This is certainly not a profound statement, but is the catfish a juvenile of a species that grows very large by aquarium standards? If so, it can and will grow very quickly. Uninformed aquarists can and do purchase these cute "little fish." (Lee Finley, a fellow columnist, has a photo of a baby shovelnosed catfish, Trixie, given to me as a gift. In the photo is a ruler at the bottom of the tank, so there is no mistaking the size — a 3-inch catfish that easily grows to 3 feet.)

Of course, what we are ultimately talking about is compatibility. That is, the capacity to live together, not merely exist together. A major problem facing catfish enthusiasts is that their fish are primarily nocturnal by nature. You can purchase a new catfish, watch it all day long and see no problems in the tank. Catfish do their dirty work after the tank lights go out.

In addition, some catfish are predators. They make their living and thus survive by eating other fish. Most tropical fish are opportunistic feeders, eating anything they come across and can easily swallow. Predatory catfish, on the other hand, are almost exclusively fish eaters. A good rule of thumb when trying to decide about a catfish for your tank is that all catfish with long barbels are predators, but not all predators have long barbels.

Some catfish, when kept as lone specimens, never seem to thrive in the aquarium regardless of the amount of space you give them (i.e., the glass catfish, Kryptopterus bicirrhis) because they really only do well in a "school." Place a half-dozen glass cats in a tank and you have active, diurnal, mid-water-swimming catfish. Even the ever popular Corydoras species of catfish, while not considered a schooling fish, are gregarious by nature. To be fully appreciated, these catfish should be kept as a group — different species will all school together.

Although this may seem too obvious, ask your aquarium dealer for advice. Give him or her enough information so that they can help you. Make your selections and then ask if there are going to be problems with the choices you made. Read about catfish. After a while, you'll become more confident (and wiser) about your selections. I think you will find the diversity of catfish something that you'll always enjoy.


 Give us your opinion on
Catfish Compatibility
Submit a Comment
Reader Comments
interesting
sk, nh, CT
Posted: 6/25/2009 7:06:38 PM
Thanks for the info.
anon, ditto, AL
Posted: 6/22/2009 11:23:22 PM
Geat!
Tanner, Cosh, OH
Posted: 6/22/2009 10:28:20 AM
I like the rule of thumb (it's easy to remember).
Scott, Richmond, VA
Posted: 4/30/2009 12:05:07 PM
View Current Comments

Name:
Address:
City:
State:
Zip Code:
Email:

Aquarium USA
Buy Now
Marine Fish and Reef USA
Buy Now
Aquarium Fish International
Buy Now




River View

Visit the Photo Gallery to
cast your vote!
Information on over 200 reptile species