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In The Bag! Tropical Fish UK

L136B Hypancistrus sp.

Regular price
£65.00 GBP
Regular price
Sale price
£65.00 GBP
Gender

 

NB: OWNER ON MATERNITY LEAVE! RESUMING BUSINESS AS USUAL IN FEBRUARY. THANK YOU FOR YOUR CONTINUED SUPPORT! WE WILL SEND PLECO POPS FISH FOOD OUT NOVEMBER ONWARDS IF MUM AND BABY ARE DOING WELL!

Where possible we have listed males and females so you can pick gender and / or a pair. If there's no option to pick, we're not sure yet. 

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All measurements are total length including tail.

Care Guide:

L136B 

Hypancistrus sp. 

Captive Bred - Indonesia

Size: 8- 10cm

Adult Size: 12 - 15cm

Temperature: 22 - 30°C, we tend to aim for 27 - 28°C.

Diet: The best all-round food we have found for them is Repashy Soilent Green which contains a mixture of algae, biofilm/aufwuchs and some fish/invertebrate protein. 

Hypancistrus are not carnivorous and do best on a varied diet. They would probably best be (very generally) described as grazers/detrivores. 

What peer reviewed studies have shown is that at least for the small number of species that have been examined they primarily graze on periphyton (aufwuchs) which is the complex layer of algae, microinvertebrates and other organic matter that grows on surfaces in freshwater environments. 

That's not to say they don't eat other things quite happily, but an exclusively protein diet is not going to be good for them long term. Flakes, frozen and live foods like bloodworm and daphnia, algae wafers, Repashy gel foods, sinking pellets and granules are all accepted.

They do eat algae and biofilm off the glass and ornaments - we don't have to clean our glass here - although like most fish they won't do much for black beard algae or hair/filamentous algae. They will also tidy up leftover food from other fish. This makes them a great cleanup crew option for larger community fish which can help to manage snail populations and general cleanliness - just be aware that what goes in must come out. 

Habitat: Easy to please. Good flow with stacks of wood and rocks with the odd pleco cave will keep these happy.

Provide some areas of low cover towards the front of the tank (such as pieces of wood, leaves or plants etc) so that they have somewhere they feel safe during feeding times; if they know where to hide, they will come out and eat actively with the rest of your fish.