How to breed Synodontis Petricola?

KevC

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Dec 7, 2005
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Can anyone provide succesful breeding information? Know it takes mature adult fish, which I have, but just not getting any takers! :naughty:
 

Oddball

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Welcome to MFK!!!

Here are a couple of write-ups I found. Hope they help.

I housed them in my 48" x 18" x 15" Rift Valley tank that had been set up in my fish house for a few years, with an assortment of Cichlids coming and going over a period of this time.

This tank was furnished with tufa rock and sand filtered by a Fluval 403 filled with perlag to help boost the p.H. Time passed and one night in September 99., I decided to take my new digital video camera into the fish house to video a tank that was situated above my Rift Tank which of course housed my 3 Synodontis petricola which by now had a single tankmate, Tropheos moorii. As I was busy videoing, something caught the corner of my eye in the tank below; I spotted two of the S.petricola chasing around each other in circles with the T. moorii in attendance. They were releasing eggs and the moorii was busy eating them.! You can just imagine the panic that I was in! so I quickly removed the Cichlid to another tank and went back to watch the spawning scene that was unfolding in front of my eyes.

I started videoing the ritual that involved the male laying his body across the female?s head in a quivering motion not unlike the T-position encountered in the Corydoras species. The female was very rounded between the pectoral and ventral fins and the male would move his mouth up and down her flanks in this area and use his mouth in a rasping motion. He would also follow/chase her around the tank using his mouth to stimulate her then they would take up the spawning position where he would grasp her head firmly and they would both shake violently until a cloud of eggs were released. He would also lie alongside the female quivering his body wherein the female would release her eggs and the male would fertilise them with his sperm. The eggs were honey coloured and were between 1.25-1.50mm in size, they were difficult to see as they blended into the sand as they were similar in colour. The spawning sequel lasted about 2 hours so I took the parents out and the other petricola, (most likely a younger female as it was less plump, and the male was making half hearted advances to it) who took no part in the proceedings. The male had a very prominent pointed genital papilla in front of the anal fins and pointing back towards the caudal, the papilla was white the same as the underbelly. In the female it is a rounded, swollen enlargement from which the eggs are expelled. The parents (and the gooseberry) ignored the eggs while they were spawning and were removed when they stopped.

I removed about half of the eggs into various small tanks and ice-cream cartons (with the ice-cream out of course!) I then added Methylene Blue to some of the containers, as I wanted to lengthen my odds on hatching rates. So I had 3 options, eggs lying in the main tank, eggs with or without Meth Blue, I also placed aeration in some of the tubs but this didn?t make any difference later on with the quality of the hatchings. I did inadvertently add an extra drop of Meth Blue to some of the containers and even though the water was still a light blue in colour the eggs did not hatch, so I quite possibly overdosed them, which then led me to the conclusion that the eggs were sensitive to an overindulgence of this treatment. Some of the hatching tanks -containers were illuminated by florescent tubes and there was no difference in the hatch rate, so there is probably no sensitivity to light.

The grand total of eggs reached 800 and out of this number I managed a 65% hatch rate, the rest of the eggs turned white and were non viable. The fry hatched out after 24 hrs and were like thin slivers of glass and very small.Fry were free swimming after three days, their bodies and fins were white all over including the large yolk sac.

On the tenth day after spawning they started to take freshly hatched brine shrimp and a few days after this they started to take on dark brown patches along the top of the body, but no spots. A very hardy fish as only thirty or so have died since they were free swimming and most have these have been due to filter problems (see handy tip later). Food-wise the fry also loved finely ground aquarian flake +promin (80+20%).
The young are happier in larger groups and more likely to come out into the open to feed, the tanks with more young in them grew faster no matter the size of tank or filter. Provide plenty of hiding places to make them feel more confident. I then fed Brine Shrimp Naupli for the first couple of months as their mouths are very small, and after this fed Tetra tabimin tablets and my own recipe of a homemade mix of flake and spinach bound together with gelatine.

At 6 months they were 1½ins standarlength (from snout to caudal peduncle). I found them to be very slow growing but I now have about 500 carbon copies of the parents which are relatively easy to raise on the afore mentioned food Tank Information: 24? x 12? x 12? with tufa rock, sand and a large sponge filter. P.h. 7.5.

Handy Tip: If using internal power filters make sure the return outlet is above the water line, as the like to swim up this and into the impellor (death) chamber, especially if the outflow is slowing down. Another place you will find them is below your undergravel filter plate, so make sure your uplift tube ends above the waterline.

Afterthought : These fish have apparently been spawned in the aquarium before but using the cuckoo method and with small numbers of fry being produced. This spawning was obviously an egg-scattering type, as the number of eggs(and the video) clearly proves. So what does this fish use as a spawning method in the wild, the similar species Synodontis multipunctatus has only ever been reported as spawning in the cuckoo style, is that why it is more prolific in the wild, as it gives its young a better start in life rather than just scattering its eggs ???

Graham Burnside

Synodontis petricola - Spawning Report

by Jerry Riegel
First published in Fincinnati, the official newsletter of the Greater Cincinnati Aquarium Society
Aquarticles

Synodontis petricola is a small (four inches) catfish from Lake Tanganyika in the Rift Valley of Eastern Africa. It looks very much like S. multipunctatus except smaller. They both have white/cream colored bodies with black spots. Both fish do well with African Cichlids (of their size, of course) from all the Rift Valley Lakes.

I bought my first S. petricola at a Greater Cincinnati Aquarium Society (GCAS) Fall 1999 Auction. There were four and I spent a hefty price for them. There were only four at the auction and, of course, I had to have them all. I bought my next group (six fish) at Wet Thumb Aquatics the following spring. I got a good price on six of them. I had to. My last group I bought at the next GCAS Auction (Spring 2000). In total, this gave me 14 fish. The last 10 were juveniles when I bought them (less than a year) and the first four were of unknown age.

At first, I thought they would spawn like the S. multipunctatus. However, I was wrong. I got put on the straight and narrow by a gentleman named Gerald Miranda who had spawned S. petricola. Of course, it cost me $60 for the video. Actually, he was very helpful. So was Dolores Scherer, who owns Wet Thumb.

They are egg scatterers. They do not "Cuckold Spawn" like S. multipunctatus. Their eggs are very small and the most absolute vibrant shade of gold. Mine have always hatched the next day (after I found them). They swim around for several days with their egg yolks. I read one account where they keep their yolks for 10 days. It was difficult for me to determine this time frame, as their size was very small. I started feeding them small amounts after several days. These included microworms and live baby brine shrimp. I used powder but sparingly. I treated them with fine kid gloves.

My breeding group consists of 13 (unlucky? No.) fish. I had lost one. They started spawning this past spring, about a year after I purchased the ten juveniles. Or, should I say this was when I noticed them spawning. At this time, the young fish were approximately two years of age. I keep them in a 20 long. Sometimes, other fish are present. I make sure, though, that the S. petricola are the dominant fish in the tank.

When I find eggs, I transfer them to a three-gallon tank. Their first several weeks/months are spent there. Their growth is slow but steady. After 35 days they are about half an inch.

At this point, I feel I am still learning about them. I have raised three broods and have made mistakes with each one of them. However, I feel that I have also learned from my mistakes. My next goal is to raise a large brood to juvenile size.
 

ogre929

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Dec 25, 2005
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that's awesome! those are some cool little fish.
 

fronnie_5

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Dec 29, 2005
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yorkshire
I have 2 breeding groups of these fish, 3 in one group and 4 in the other. One group are in with a trio of mozambique mouthbrooders and they "cuckoo spawn" with them frequently. To get them ready for breeding i have found the white mosquito larvae or bloodworm do the trick. Fatten the mup and the female will have a "marble" sized lump. When they are ready to spawn the male and female seem to lay in "T" shape. To get the mouthbrooders to spawn i then do a water change , they do there stuff and then the petricola do there stuff and there you go. The most i got out of one breeding was 94 from this method.

The other group do it by just laying eggs in a "cave". They did this once in a holding tank. They werent even a breedign group just 2 males and a female.
They were being fed on usual catfish pellets etc. The female got her " marble". Then it disapeared, I didnt think anything of it then a week or so later hundreds of fry. I ended up with around 100 from that batch. Now they breed that way all the time.
:screwy:
 

MoxieDesignz

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Feb 25, 2009
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Killa Kali
Im bring this thread back to life....anyone know more about how to breed Synodontis Petricola dwarfs? I just purchased a group of 10. Please help if im successful, ill kick some down for free.
 
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