Auchenoglanis biscutatus

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
Thank you for the update. This is no biscutatus. This is Auchenoglanis cf occidentalis Volta to me. Yellowcat Yellowcat

Biscutatus has even, level rows of spots, small spots in the fins, marbled / mottled patterned parts on the top and upfront, as opposed to Volta, and yours.
 
I'm inclined to agree with Viktor, not a. biscutatus as noted this one has larger spots on the caudal fin, a smaller adipose fin, more distance between the dorsal and adipose fin and a longer nose than a. biscutatus. Not sure of it's ID otherwise, never kept a Volta variety so can't compare...
 
Hey,
Thank you Viktor!
Man that's such a shame since I bought the specimen from Aquarium Glaser expecting them to get the ID right.
Sadly I cannot upgrade my largest tank any further so I need to know what size a Volta giraffe would be able to grow to.
I guess anything larger than 20in would be absolutely NOT suitable for my 6ft by 31.5in tank.
 
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Think depending on which type it does turn out to be you could be ok for quite a few years or you could be ok-ish for life. I have two what I believe to be occidentalis type (not sure of actual location type) which both seem to have maxed out after 8years at a little over 2 ft in 1400g. Albeit a 6x 31.5 will be quite cramped at that size for a single fish of course.
 
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Our supposed male Volta is 5 years old and 14". Our supposed female Volta is 7 years old and 18". That's about all I can tell you.

I've no doubt yours is Volta.

Ours and some from the web that I believe to be Volta too:

Giraffe cat Volta-1 0 WetSpot pic.jpgGiraffe cat Volta-1 2.JPGGiraffe cat Volta-1 4.JPGGiraffe cat Volta-1 5.JPGGiraffe cat Volta-1 6.JPGGiraffe cat Volta-2 0 WetSpot pic.JPGGiraffe volta online 1.jpgGiraffe volta online 3.jpgGiraffe volta online 4.jpg
 
I can't say we know how much smaller Volta gcats are versus bigger cousins. Yellowcat and I used to read people stating, prognosing that Volta don't grow past 1 foot, which in my experience, if we are talking the same fish species, turned out only 50% true and who knows if our Voltas decide to grow more in the future, albeit they have been stuck at present sizes for years.

The genus is in limbo. Scientists can't agree who to call what. How much less would tangential professionals (vendors) and laymen know?! Vendors have not much time to chase exact and right IDs. Between laymen, it often comes down to aficionados and experts to help us ID our fish, even if tentatively. For instance, without the input from the science-paper-reading folks like Yellowcat on MFK and Birger on Planet Catfish, I'd be a LOT less confident in my knowledge of g-cat ID. Even as is, I often find myself unsure or helpless without their input.

No one knows every fish, even most fish, but many know some fish well. In our hobby, it is often a matter of finding these experts. "ID an expert before you ID a fish!" haha...

On a related issue, it's funny how in some older threads 10 non-experts would ID a fish one way and one expert (and the fact that s/he is an expert is known only to regulars, not newbies) would ID it right and an original poster would go with the majority of beginners, as if ID-ing is some kind of democratic process and a crowd can't be wrong, haha...

Written and printed word for many centuries belonged exclusively to experts, because it was expensive! Apart from yellow press. Nowadays, every half-wit like me can spew stuff freely and uninhibited for the whole world to read, while in the back of our genetic mind sits that dogma that written word is to be trusted, to be true, to have come from a mind that has thoroughly digested what it is saying.

I always strive to find and know experts and learn from them, ask good questions, push the experts themselves to learn, be grateful, and respect them. They are the gems and the cornerstones of each while worthy forum. They are the knowledge sharks. The rest, like me, are the remoras, the sojourning, benefitting scavengers of knowledge :)

Sorry about the $0.02 rant.
 
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Just called in at one of my favourite Shops and picked up what I am guaranteed is a.biscutatus from an African shipment. These were in three months ago when I last called and have not grown more than an inch in that time, if that. The largest they have seen of this type (locale/supplier) has hit 22” but that was a six year old female with huge girth although don’t believe these are Volta river fish.
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Will be interested to see how both our fish progress.
 
This is A. biscutatus indeed.

If one of theirs grew to 22" in 6 years, it wasn't a biscutatus, I'd say. It was some other species.

The fish origin, even if from the same supplier, can be murky. I personally sprinkle a lot of skepticism on it, or spread it with a butter knife, before ingesting that info.
 
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