Polypterus Profiles

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Jack Dempsey
MFK Member
Dec 18, 2005
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I thought this forum needs some info on these amazing creatures so I started doing this:
any additional thoughts or comments would galdly be accepted.

Senegal bichir
Polypterus senegalus senegalus
Order: Polypteriformes
Family: Polypteridae
Genus: Polyterus

Identification:
"The body is long and about as deep as it is wide. A serrated dorsal fin runs along most of the body until it meets the caudal fin. The pectoral fins attach just behind and below the gill openings and are the primary means of locomotion, providing a slow, graceful appearance.”
[Wikipedia]
Temperature: 77- 82*F
Length: 12”
Range: Widespread across tropical Africa
Tank Setup: Minimum tank size should be 30g. Decorate the tank with rocks and bogwood, as with all bichirs a sand substrate is recommended to prevent the fish from accidentally swallowing gravel when feeding. The fish is a predator so tank mates should be at least half its size.
Diet: Live and frozen meaty foods of all kinds, fish are a favorite. Small specimens can be fed bloodworms until they have grown enough to take larger foods.
Reproduction: Rare but possible, the fish will scatter their eggs and show no brood care. Males have a large pocket-like anal fin.
Notes: The fish has no special needs for water parameters; as long as extremes of hardness and pH are avoided the fish will thrive. As the fish rarely grows larger than 10" this is one of the more easily kept bichirs, they are also not as nocturnal as other bichir species and will happily feed and move about in daylight.
“Bichirs are escape artists. Without a secure lid on an aquarium, the fish will eventually escape, and go quite a long distance before drying out and dying.”
[Wikipedia]

p_senegalus-juv1.jpg

Photo copyrighted by Sean Evans
 
Ornate Bichir
Polypterus ornatipinnis
Order: Polypteriformes
Family: Polypteridae
Genus: Polyterus

Identification:
“The Ornate Bichir, is considered the most attractive of the Bichir group.. As with other members of the primitive Polypteridae family, the Ornate Bichir has the unique ability to survive out of water. With a lung-like paired swimbladder and gills to help breathing, the Ornate Bichir can spend short periods of time on land, but must soon return to its water environment for adequate respiration.”
[Pet Ed.]
Temperature: 77- 83*F
Length: 24”
Range: Central Africa
Tank Setup: Minimum tank size should be 50g. Decorate the tank with rocks and bogwood, as with all bichirs a sand substrate is recommended to prevent the fish from accidentally swallowing gravel when feeding. The fish is a predator so tank mates should be at least half its size. The should be ideally densely planted with various rocks.
Diet: Live and frozen meaty foods of all kinds, fish are a favorite. Small specimens can be fed bloodworms until they have grown enough to take larger foods. chopped meats and beef heart are an excellent treat.
Reproduction: Eggs are deposited on clumps of vegetation; however, breeding in the hobbyist's aquarium setting is not common. The parents show no brood care. Males have a large pocket-like anal fin.
Notes: The fish grows very quickly and can easily reach lengths of over a foot within a year, make sure that you have the tank to house the adult fish before purchasing one. Prone to jumping, a tight, well-sealed aquarium lid is required.

polypterus_ornatipinnis.jpg

Photo Credit: Beth Hoffert
 
Armored Bichir
Polypterus delhezi
Order: Polypteriformes
Family: Polypteridae
Genus: Polyterus

Identification:
“The Delhezi Bichir is also known as the Armored or Banded Bichir and originates from the Congo basin, Africa. As with other members of the primitive Polypteridae family, the Delhezi Bichir has the unique ability to survive out of water. With a lung-like paired swim bladder and gills to help breathing, the Delhezi Bichir can spend short periods of time on land, but must soon return to its water environment for adequate respiration. This species is snakelike in shape with a tapered, blunt head and is silver/grey in appearance with many black vertical bars covering the back of the fish. Their mouth is relatively small when compared to other Bichir.”
[Pet Ed.]
Temperature: 78- 83*F
Length: 16”
Range: Central Africa, Congo River
Tank Setup: A large tank decorated with rocks, bogwood, and a few plants. A sandy substrate is recommended to prevent the fish from accidentally swallowing gravel when feeding.
Diet: Frozen meaty foods of all kinds, mussels and whitebait are favorites. Young bichirs can be fed bloodworms until they are large enough to take bigger foods.
Reproduction: Unknown, but most likely similar to other polypterus. Males have a large, thick anal fin.
Notes: This fish is predatory and will eat anything that can fit into its mouth. Choose tank mates such as knifes and Siamese tiger fish, it may attack their own species. Prone to jumping, a tight, well-sealed aquarium lid is required.

Poly-delhezi.jpg


Photo Credit: Andreas Hartl
 
On the tank size for the ornate a 20+inch fish is gonna be a lil cramped in a tank 36x18 inches.While they are not the most active of fish they should have room to move if they want.-Anne

have some general bichir information
Introduction
Polypterids are the sole survivors of the Order Polypteriformes whose distribution included Africa and South America and can be dated back at least 100 million years in the fossil record. They are among the most primitive of the ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii) the dominant group of fishes today.

The elongate body of a Polypterid range from 10 inches to 3 ft long adult size depending on the species and round in cross section becoming compressed near the tail.They have a powerful body with the spine midline thru the body and four large muscles flanking it. ending in a Diphycercal Tail.

Polypterids are covered by multilayered scales,rhomboid in shape and have articulating peg and socket joints between them,With an outer layer of ganoine( (an inorganic bone salt) a middle layer of dentine and a layer of isopidine and an inner dermal, cosmine bony layer and are referred to as ganoid scales. Only the bowfin (Amiidae) share this particular ganoid scale construction.
The dorsal fin of the Polypterids is split into a row of small, sail-like finlets that are erected individually when the animal is agitated or feels threatened.

Polypterids are also unusual among ray-finned fishes in possessing only four rather than five gill arches.

Newly hatched Polypterids have feathery gills, not unlike lungfishes, which may be retained for some time.Most individuals lose them by the time
they have reached 2-3 inches.Polypterids are suited to life in warm stagnant backwaters and swamps where oxygen levels are low.They have adapted to these habitats by the use of a primitive form of lungs which allow them to breathe atmospheric air as opposed to being solely dependent on dissolved oxygen in the water.Bichirs are bimodal in respiratory function--they have both gills and well vascularized lungs--and can survive using either.

The Polypterids are shallow water species often swimming in the weeds and plants near shores and banks of Central and West African freshwater lakes and rivers.They seem to vary between diurnal and nocturnal depending on species in the wild.

They are sometimes caught as a food fish and are said to be quite tasty.

In addition to the ten species and six subspecies of Polypterus, the family also includes the ropefish, Erpetoichthys calabaricus, similar in character and distribution but lacking the pelvic fins and with a longer eel-like form.

All species of Polypterus require the same care just the size of the tank changes bigger species bigger tanks.

Polypterids tend to be long lived averaging 10-15 years in captivity.
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Polypterid fossil record
The polypterid fossil record was for a long time reduced to some scarce, disarticulated bones, mainly scales, found in various African deposits covering a wider area than the actual geographical distribution. With the discovery, on one hand, of polypterid scales, vertebrae, dermal bones of the cranium and dorsal spiny rays in South America and, on the other hand, of scales and numerous dorsal spiny rays in Niger and Sudan, and two articulated fossils in Morocco, the story of the polypteriformes has revealed some of its mysteries. The discovery of isopedine between dentine and bony basal plate in the scales of living and fossil polypterid species is considered a synapomorphy of the group, and has been an important aid in discriminating polypterid scales from other ganoid scales(Fish and Fisheries Volume 2 Issue 2 Page 113 - June 2001)
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Species and sizes
maximum known sizes often smaller in captivity
Upper Jaw Species-Upper jaw protrudes past lower jaw
P. palmas palmas ('palmas' bichir)- 13"
(subspecies)P. palmas polli ('marbled bichir)- 14"
(subspecies) P. palmas buettikoferi ('buettikoferi' bichir)- 13"
P. ornatipinnis ('ornate' bichir)- 27"
P. delhezi ('armoured' or 'delhez's' bichir)- 14"
P. senegalus senegalus ('Senegal' or 'Cuiver's' bichir)- 12"
(possible subspecies)P. senegalus meridionalis- 12"+
There is, Also the possibility of a third member of the Polypterus senegalus
group that is found in the Nile River
P. retropinnis ('retropinnis' bichir)- 14"
P .mokelembembe
P. weeksi ('week's' bichir)- 20"
P.teugelsi (found only in the Cross river)-16.75''
E. calabaricus ('Ropefish')- 15"-30" (Closer to 15''-20'' in captivity)

Lower Jaw Species-Lower protrudes past upper jaw
P. endlicheri endlicheri ('saddled' or 'red' bichir)- 32", possibly more
(subspecies)P. endlicheri congicus ('giant' or 'congo' bichir)- 39"
P. Bichir lapradei ('Lapradei' bichir)- 24"
P. bichir bichir-30+ ''
P.ansorgii*

There are a couple of as-yet-undescribed (scientifically) Polypterids

Variations
There are variations of the above including
short bodied:
longfinned:
albinoism:Albino Polypterids have a pink/ white body with red eyes if they are a species with pronounced markings
these are often yellowish in color
leustic:Leustic (platinum) are silver/whitish bodies with black eyes.

.*Until recently representives of this species was only known
from 3 preserved species in museums and was thought to
be extinct.
I actually plan on dragging the rest of this thing I'm writing over as soon as I finnish it.I'm currently working on the brain structure.And i need to add some information on breeding and the larval stage of development.Also the fossil
record.
 
Thats probably 1/10th of what i have written so far lol what i was planning on was all this written mumbo jumbo and the section with species and sizes adding a picture of each species I just needtotake more pics or get permission from people to use thier photos-Anne
 
hey beblondie great info from both of you and you can use any of my pics whenever holla back!!
 
ve some stuff
FINS
The fins on fish serve many purposes on polypterids starting at the front.
The lobed pectoral fins are used for braking and manuvering,and casual swiming
The dorsal finlets are raised and lowered in threat assesment,defense and courtship,
The pelvic fins are used as stabilizers.
The anal fin serve a two fold purpose,one is stabilization the other during mating
The cadual fin and the rear of the body as their main propulsion when speed or power is required.
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SLIMECOAT
Is a mucous created by the continal replacement of glandular cells know in the fishes skin that produce a glycoprotein which is called mucin. This when mixed with water forms the mucus that makes up the slime coat of fish.Fish with poorly developed scales tend to produce more of this slime coat.. The slime coat does threee basci things- it reduces turbulence for the fish when swimming by smotthing over the areas between the fishes scales-it helps regulate the internal/external ionic balance and the efficiecy of gases exchanged through the skins surface-ie-osmoregullation and it provides a slipery surface that in it's sloughing off prevents bacteria from attching themselves to the skin. Bacteria is simply washed away from the skin with this process. It also aids in acting as a wound bandage.Stressed fish have a change in their slime coat-either too much or too little.One sign of a stressed bichir is usually overproduction of its slimecoat.
LATERAL LINE
The lateral line system consists of bendable nerve endings in a series of mucous-filled canals Vibrations in the water or differential pressure in different parts of the canal cause the fluid to move and distort the nerve endings.
Because of it's name, we think of the lateral-line system as being oriented laterally on
the fish.Closer inspection shows a concentration of sensory receptors on the head
branching into 4 lines.The occipital,The supraorbital, The suborbital and The
hyomandibular.
The lateral line system enables detection of both vibrations in the water and changes in the pressure field set up as the fish swims. It provides information to the fish about movements of nearby organisms, very-low-frequency sound, differential current velocity, and back pressure built up as the fish approaches an obstacle.The lateral line sense is sufficiently directional to enable blinded fish to find and capture prey.
A swimming fish sets up a pressure wave in the water that is detectable by the lateral line systems of other fishes. It also sets up a bow wave in front of itself, the pressure of which is higher than that of the wave flow along its sides. These near-field differences are registered by its own lateral line system. As the fish approaches an object, such as a rock or the glass wall of an aquarium, the pressure waves around its body are distorted, and these changes are quickly detected by the lateral line system, enabling the fish to swerve or to take other suitable action. Because sound waves are waves of pressure, the lateral line system is also able to detect very low-frequency sounds of 100 Hz or less.
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SOUND PRODUCTION
P.senegalus and P.retropinnis were studied and found to make two distinct sounds.A thumping noise and a moan.
The mechanics are unclear at this time.
Thumps: Occured during close encounters by conspecifics one or both would raise their dorsal fins and emit thumps the sound energy was strongest between 100-200z with a maximum rate of 3 thumps per second and decreasing as one conspecific moved away from the other.
Moans could be heard even without technical equipment.As conspecifics swam rapidly away from eachother or were startled.
Also reported to makes the same sounds(but not studied) are P. endlicheri, P.palmas polli, and P. ornatipinnis
(Abstract in Icthyological notes: Copeia 1988 (4) pp. 1076-1077).
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Did you knows
1.Did you know until the last few years all bichirs were wild caught?
2.Did you know most bichirs come from a band across Africa along following the equator from 10 degrees north to 10 degrees south of it?
3.Did you know females are generaly larger than males?
4. Did you know bichirs can be traced back some 96 million years but are thought to be even older
5.bichirs have two plate-like structures on the bottom of their lower jaw; these are known as 'gular plates' and are thicker bony structures which aid the bichir in crushing food; the bowfin (Family Amiidae) also has this structure in the form of a single large gular plate, also used for compressing food
6.While the sex of bichirs can be determined at 7-9 inches,Some species may not be sexually mature till 6 years of age
7.While the scales of Lepisosteidae species(Gars) may look the same they lack the middle dentine layer present in Polypterids and Amiidae.
8. Importation or possesion is prohibited in Hawaii
9. According to the USGSa few specimens of Polypterus delhezi have been caught in SE Florida(probably escapees due to storm related events)
10.A country in Africa(Ivory Coast) had a Polypterus endlicheri endlicheri on a stamp in 1986
11.Polypterus senegalus, the longnose gar (Lepisosteus osseus) and the bowfin (Amia calva) had gulonolactone oxidase activity in the kidney and thus can synthesize ascorbic acid(VITAMIN C) (Journal of Fish BiologyVolume 57 Issue 3 Page 733 - September 2000)
12.Use dorsally placed spiracle to exhale (not inhale like skates and rays)(Ichthyology Spring 1999 T. Turner Lecture 12)
 
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