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CATFISH


ARIIDAE FAMILY
The Ariidae, Shark Catfish, or Sea Catfish family includes a single genus, Arius, and is found in brackish and salt water throughout the world. Estimates exceeding 120 species have been made.

Shark Catfish, Colombian Shark Catfish
[ Pictures ]
Arius seemani
SYN : Arius jordani, Hexanematichthys seemani, Tachisurus seemani
PD : The body is elongated and silver in color and the belly is white. The fins are black and white-tipped. The head is broad, with a large mouth. The eyes are large and protrude from the head. The Shark Catfish possesses three pairs of barbels; one on the upper jaw and two on the lower. The color contrasts fade with age.
SIZE : To 24" (60 cm) in nature, although rarely larger than 15" (38 cm) in captivity.
SS : Other Arius species
H : North, Central, and South America; estuaries of tidal rivers and lagoons from Southern California to Peru on the Pacific Coast
A : bottom, middle
TANK : A 40" (102 cm) or 45-55 gallons (170-209 L) is sufficient for young individuals. Adults need a tank of at least 64" (163 cm) or 100-125 gallons (378-472 L). The tank should be well lighted, maybein a position to receive morning sun. A strong filter is necessary for a powerful current and a good turn-overrate. Provide many caves and hiding places.
WATER : pH 6.8-8 (7.6), 8-30 dH (16), 72-81°F (22-27°C). A 2% addition of salt is necessary. This can be accomplished by adding 15 TSP. of salt/ 10 gallons (20 g of salt/10 L).
SB : Combine only with larger, sturdy fish who live in brackish water. These fish are capable of swallowing fish up to 67% of their length. Keep in groups of four or more individuals.
SB : Adults can be combined with marine species; young can be combined with Anableps, Monodactylus, Scatophagus , Tetraodon , and Toxotes species.
FOOD : Live; fish, crustaceans, insect larvae; tablets. This species prefers food in chunks. Has huge appetite and may attack other tank mates if not fed sufficiently.
SC : Females plumper when over 12" (30 cm).
B : Unsuccessful in captivity because of the area needed. Spawning has been observed in nature. It takes places in freshwater and brackish estuaries. Up to 100 marble-sized eggs are mouth-brooded by the male.
BP : 10. Breeding has not been accomplished in aquaria.
R : A very active fish. Can only be kept in fresh or brackish water while juveniles. With age more salt must be added to the water. Adults require sea water or brackish water. Some populations of this fish migrate south from California during the colder parts of the year. By rotating its pectoral fin in its socket, adult fish can make a loud, croaking sound. This sound is amplified by the swim bladder.
DC : 4 (while young). Young fish are extremely hardy, but aggressive and require live foods. 7(adult). Adults need to be kept in salt water, and are highly aggressive towards smaller fish.

Species Index | Fish Home | Rainforests




Recent news

Argentina bans fishing, trawling in eco-rich area
(10/9/2008) The government of Argentina has banned commercial fishing along Burdwood Bank, an 1,800 square kilometer (694 square mile) submerged island off its southern coast, according to the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS).

Mediterranean bluefin tuna originate in the Gulf of Mexico
(10/2/2008) Researchers have discovered a previously unknown migratory route for the northern bluefin tuna, proving for the first time that the species' Mediterranean and North American subpopulations interact. According to the paper published in Science the two groups meet as juveniles then return to their birthplace to spawn. For a critically-endangered species that is still heavily fished, the new finding has large conservation and management implications.

12 fish species go extinct in lake near Istanbul
(9/24/2008) Turkey has lost twelve species of fish to pollution in Lake Sapanca. Lake Sapanca used to be one of Turkey's most bio-diverse lakes. A decade ago the lake's water was pristine enough to be pumped directly to Istanbul for citizen use, but due to rising pollution it no longer serves as a source for the city water.

100 new species of sharks and rays discovered in Australia
(9/19/2008) Scientists have described 100 new species of sharks and rays in the seas around Australia.

A solution to worldwide fishery collapse?
(9/18/2008) In November 2006 a study on global fisheries received a lot of attention: employing 53 years worth of fishery data, Boris Worm predicted that by 2048 the ocean would be empty of fish. Essentially there would be nothing left to catch. Already, Worm reported, fishing stocks had collapsed in 29 percent of the world's fisheries. Although scientists called for rapid and overhauling changes to fisheries, the fishing industry carried on business-as-usual. Now, two years later, a study in Science proposes to have found the solution to the global fishery-collapse.


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Copyright Rhett Butler 1994-2006

The copy for fish.mongabay.com was written in 1994-1995. Therefore some information such as scientific names may be out of date. For this, I apologize. Feel free to send corrections to me.