Goes without saying but quarantine any additional fish for a very long time before introducing to the tank.
Yes definitely, especially with a fish like chitala that can’t be medicated.Goes without saying but quarantine any additional fish for a very long time before introducing to the tank.
Yes the image you have used is one of my old Chitala. I always assumed it was C lopis - although I never put in real effort into identifying it.I believe the borneensis is Peckoltia ‘s am unsure how to tag someone in the thread though. The curator I am discussing with says he has a specimen himself and that this is how they most commonly appear.
Thank you, this is very interesting information. It’s strange yours was lacking the pectoral spotting but grew so quickly. If you are able to unlock the pictures and share them here, it would be much appreciated. Mine often shows the deep purple color as well, it’s likely we have a similar fish. Mine goes between gaining and losing the pectoral spot, it’s quite the strange transition.Yes the image you have used is one of my old Chitala. I always assumed it was C lopis - although I never put in real effort into identifying it.
This fish never showed any signs of typical spotting and it's general colour varied from completely silver (night colouration) to mostly a fairly deep purple colour.
The thing that sticks out to me is borneensis is said to be a 'dwarf' species of Chitala. My fish grew from a small juvenile to 24" in a little over 18 months, which does not match this description. I have lost more images of this fish locked in my old photobucket account, will have to get the account unlocked and post them.
Thanks,
Alex