Albino Wels Catfish (Silurus glanis 'Albino')

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Albino Wels Catfish
Silurus glanis 'Albino'
Albino Wels Catfish (Silurus glanis 'Albino')
Name Albino Wels Catfish
Name Lat. Silurus glanis 'Albino'
Family Sheatfishes
Family lat. Siluridae
Order Catfishes
Order lat. Siluriformes
Origin Europe, Asia
Habitat Rivers, lakes, estuaries
Diet Carnivore
pH 7.0-7.5
Behavior Predatory
Keeping Individual
Care Level Experts only
Reproduction Substrate spawner
Breeding Moderately difficult
Life Span 30-40 years
Protection No
Metric Units
Size 90-100 cm
Temperature 4-22 °C
Hardness < 10 °dH
Aquarium Pond
US Units
Size 35"-39"
Temperature 39-72 °F
Hardness < 178 ppm
Aquarium Pond

Distribution and habitat

The European Albino Catfish is a breeding form. The distribution range of the predominantly nocturnal wild form extends from Central and Eastern Europe through Asia Minor to the Caspian Sea. They live in warm lakes rich in plants and in deep slow-flowing rivers with soft, muddy bottoms, where they usually stay hidden in caves or in the root network of trees during the day

Maintenance

A very large pond is recommended, which should be furnished with pond, floating and oxygenating underwater plants (milfoil, waterweed, hornwort, etc.), large river pebbles with numerous hiding places, as well as a soft substrate of round-grained gravel and sand suitable for burrowing, and offer free swimming space.

No ammonia, ammonium or nitrite should be detectable in the water, and the nitrate value should not exceed 100 mg/l. To ensure the water quality and oxygen content, a filter adapted to the water volume is necessary.

Diet

They are greedy and voracious predators that feed on fish, frogs, small water birds and small mammals. According to their size, the food supply consists of insect larvae, snails, mussels, earthworms, crayfish, fish, etc., which is easily accepted even frozen, as well as beef heart and sinking dry food for pond fish (catfish pellets)

It should in no case be fed daily and only as much as is eaten within a few minutes

Behaviour and compatibility

The juveniles live in a shoal, but adults behave very aggressively within the species. Only in sufficiently large ponds several European Catfish can be kept together. Socialization is only possible with large and defensible fish, as they will eat anything that fits in their large mouths.

Basically, only mutually compatible fish species with similar requirements for water quality and water temperature may be socialized.

Reproduction and breeding

No external distinguishing characteristics are known. At spawning time, the females appear somewhat rounder.

They spawn between May and July at a water temperature of at least 18 °C. The female lays the 1.4-2 mm eggs, which are guarded by the male, in a self-made shallow bottom pit in the plant-covered shore area. After 2-5 days the larvae hatch and brood care ends. The young fish grow very quickly and are sexually mature after 2-3 years.

Important

European catfish, the largest freshwater fish in Europe, forage primarily in the evening or at night. They have an excellent sense of smell and taste, and the animals' extremely sensitive hearing is specialized for sounds above the water surface.

If they are overwintered in the pond, sufficient depth and oxygen supply (filter, oxygen dispenser, ice free holder) must be ensured.

At temperatures below 8-10 °C, the metabolism of the fish slows down and food is no longer accepted; feeding must be stopped accordingly. If the temperature drops further, they hibernate near the bottom. In spring, with rising temperatures, feeding can slowly be resumed. Feeding may also be necessary during prolonged warm periods in winter.

The well-being of the fish should be monitored regularly. A regular partial water change, according to the pond size is recommended, even if the pollutant load has not yet reached the upper limit. Sudden changes in water quality should be avoided. Newly introduced fish must be accustomed to the water slowly

Further literature can be found in your pet store.

References

Text: Werner Winter; Image: petdata

Source: BMELV (1998): Tierschutzgutachten - Haltung von Zierfischen (Süßwasser); RIEHL & BAENSCH (2006): Aquarien Atlas Bd. 3, Mergus Verlag; ENGELMANN (2005): Zootierhaltung - Tiere in menschlicher Obhut: Fische, Verlag Harri Deutsch

  • Gemäß § 21 Abs. 5 Tierschutzgesetz idgF