Anyone Keep/Kept Blue Catfish?

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
They are definitely Blues. They aren't spotted and have a squared off anal fin.
 
I am not directly challenging you since I have no expertise in the area, but what I have seen online contradicts your simple test. See, for example, http://www.catfishedge.com/catfish-species-basics/ but there are others. And in fact it seems "furctatus" (blue catfish species name) actually means "forked".

Channel cat = forked tail.

Blue cat = not forked tail.

Yes, petshops usually lie about their channel cats, calling them "Blue" for no good reason. I have trouble believing the "non-albino" line. I think it's intentional, to increase sales. Employees are usually clueless and think they are actually selling Blue Catfish to people. But they are not.

I tried for a year or so to get a blue catfish and could not. A few people claimed they could get one for me, but all came up empty. Had to settle for something else. Which, actually, has turned out quite well so far.

But do pound the pavement! 200g is a fine start, especially if you truly have a suitable re-home plan in place. I hope you can find one!
 
Sorry, I should have said deeper forking in channel than blue. Good catch!
 
Channel cat = forked tail.

Blue cat = not forked tail.

Not true. In fact, the specific epithet of the blue cat-- furcatus-- specifically references the bifurcated (forked) tail of the fish.

The only large ictalurids (not that there are too many to begin with) not to have the forked tail are white cats and flatheads.


EDIT- I see Simcan is quicker on the draw than me. Well played, sir.

EDIT 2-

Sorry, I should have said deeper forking in channel than blue. Good catch!

Again, not entirely true. Large eild blues will often have a loss of the bifurcation in their tail, but young, healthy captive fish have a tail as nice or nicer than a channel. This will carry over to adult long term captives as well. We just don't see many of those.


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They are definitely Blues. They aren't spotted and have a squared off anal fin.

That's promising. To be even surer one could count the rays in the anal fin and provide pics so experts like Chicxulub and Oddball would ID.

I too am of the impression that I have never seen or read anywhere that the depth of the caudal fork differs in channels and blues or is used in ID-ing.
 
Some pics of my old fish that I 'stole' from Planet Catfish because I don't have my HDD nearby. I don't feel guilty doing this because it is my name on the copyright, after all.

Note the difference in the head profile; the line from the tip of the nose to the dorsal fin is generally straight on the BC but curved on the CC. Note the difference in barbles; the BC has severely reduced barbels in relation to the CC, as is typical for pelagic catfish. You can't see it well in this shot, but the anal fin's bottom edge is perfectly straight on the BC while it is quite visibly rounded on the CC.

These guys shared a tank but they never really got close to one another. I reckon they're about eight inches in these shots, but this was like four or five years ago so I really don't remember.

blue.png

channel.png

blue.png

channel.png
 
Nice, Rob. Thanks. I didn't know/think of the barbels and the straight profile. Good to note.

You cannot steal your own pics :) PCF merely hosts them for you and with your permission. They are your photos and thanks to people like you our main point of reference - the PCF's Cat-eLog - gets improved day by day, year by year for all to use it.
 
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