Wednesday, June 21, 2006

Clown Loach



Data Sheet

Scientific Name: Botia macracanthus
Family: Cobitidae
Origin:Indoesia
Adult Size:10 inch / (25cm).
Social:Peaceful schooling fish
Lifespan: 50+ years
Tank Level: Mid, bottom Dweller

Minimum Tank Size:20 gallons
Diet:
Omnivore, eats most food, but prefer live food.
Breeding:Egglayer
Care:Intermediate
Ideal pH: 7.2-7.5
Temperature: 77-86 F (25-30 C)
Tank setup:

Some plants and clear area for open swimming. Rocks for hiding when shy.
Sexing:
Males can be identified by the tail, which is larger and hooks inward rather than pointing straight out from the body. Females are smaller and more slender.




Description:

The body of the clown loach is moderately elongated and laterally compressed. It has an arched back, an almost straight belly profile, and four pairs of barbels. The barbels located on the lower jaw are very small. The head is large and the mouth faces downward, with thick fleshy lips. The clown loach has an orange and black striped body, with the strips pattern being highly similar to the tiger barb.Unlike the tiger barb which tends to be highly aggressive, the clown loach is highly peaceful. Its beautiful striped body, red fins and active behavior has made it one of the most popular loaches. The pectoral, ventral, and caudal fins are yellowish with black markings.Unlike many loaches who are only active at night, the clown loach is very active during the daytime hours.

Habitat/Care:

Peaceful with its own and other species, it prefers to have companions with which it will form a school. It do best in groups of 3-4 or more, and having more campanions will greatly help to ensure its survival. It is a relatively slow feeder, and care must be taken to ensure that it has food to eat, especially when mixed with faster feeders such as danios.

Rocks and roots suitably placed in the tank will provide shelter. A good tank setup for a Clown Loach should include ample shade, plants (plastic or real), hiding places and other peaceful fishes. Make sure the environment is not too bright. Provide shade from tank lighting.

Water quality is critical for keeping clown loaches healthy. Care should be take to keep water very clean, well aerated, and warm.

Mixing with other fishes:

Because Clown Loaches come from rivers and streams, they are accustomed to having other fishes and plants in their environment. Not having plants and/or other fishes can cause Clown Loaches to become stressed and to go into hiding. Despite their large size, these peaceful fish can be mixed with smaller peaceful fish such as neon, cardinal or rummynose tetra. Some people have noted that the larger clown loach does prey on smaller fish especially when they are sexually active and mating (see breeding below).

Diet:

The clown loach requires green fod in their diet, such as scalded letuce or boiled garden peas. They are partial to chopped shrimp, cod roe, tubifex and bloodworms.. but they tend to prefer live foods.. especially worms such as tubifex or bloodworms. They are also found to make clicking noises when excited or eating.

Breeding:

Clown loaches have to be quite old and at least 7 inches (17 cm) before they are sexually matured. It has been noted that a few weeks before spawning, the clown loaches will change their behaviour and start eating live fish as their only accepted food. The females will grow very fast on this diet, and will be almost doubled in girth by the time of spawning. On the night in which the spawning took place, the clowns loaches will swim entwined in each other and making clicking sounds. Some records have indicted that the female loach can lay as many as 500 eggs in one spawning. Clown loaches, like most other fishes, do eat their own eggs, so it is recommended that the parents be removed at this time.

The fry should be fed liquid fry food for the first two weeks, after which they may accepted crushed flakes. Frys grow relatively fast, to 2.5 cm/ 1 inch in 6 weeks. After that the growth rate slowed down.

Note: A new method has been found by Mitchell McKenzie to accurately sex the clown loach. To read about it, please visit here.

Illness:

Loaches are particularly prone to ick infestations, and the clown loach is no exception. The clown loach should be watched closely whenever new fish or plants are added to the tank. In the event that the fish is infected, do remember that loaches, like catfish, are very sensitive to some medications - often the dosages should be half of what is recommended. .

Photo Galley

Got a photo? Contact me.










References Cited:

1. Shirlie Sharpe, Clown Loach [Online], Available http://freshaquarium.about.com/cs/loaches1/p/clownloach.htm
2. David Goodwin (2001), The Aquarium Fish Handbook, D & S books, England.
3. Loaches Online, Clown Loach (Botia macracanthus), [Online], Available, http://www.loaches.com/species_pages/botia_macracanthus.html
4. Clown Loach, Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia, [Online], Available,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clown_loach

18 comments:

Carl said...

Great Blog, clown loaches are among my favorite fish. Here is another informational blog about water quality:
Why use a UV Sterilizer

Sank said...

Eugine, how about doing a post on severums? We have a couple now and can't figure out if they are going to be friendly in the long term of not...

justin said...

Great article. My clown loaches have been eating my neon tetras. Last week I had 23 tetras in my tank. This week I'm down to only 8. They are under 7 inches long so I don't think they are ready to mate.

richard said...

after reading justins comment i now think that my "missing" neon tetra must have been eaten by 1 of my clown loach.

Anonymous said...

Eugine, the sexing of clowns by caudual fin differentiation is now largely considered inaccurate and out-dated. A very recent finding (by myself) has shown that for a very brief period during the breeding season, males develop tubercles around the head which are quite visible, this together with the fullness of the females are the only known features of sexual dimorphism known to the species. Email me and I'll send you some pictures

Regards

Mitchell McKenzie
(pintius5@aol.com)

pintius said...

Eugine, the sexing of clowns by caudual fin differentiation is now largely considered inaccurate and out-dated. A very recent finding (by myself) has shown that for a very brief period during the breeding season, males develop tubercles around the head which are quite visible, this together with the fullness of the females are the only known features of sexual dimorphism known to the species. Email me and I'll send you some pictures

Regards

Mitchell McKenzie
(pintius5@aol.com)

Anonymous said...

Here's another blogger who keeps clown loaches: http://richelectron.blogspot.com/2007/06/jebo-r338-aquarium-fish-stock.html. Do you think his tank might be a little small for clown loaches? http://richelectron.blogspot.com/2007/06/jebo-r338-aquarium.html

Kathy said...

my neon tetra's are disappearing. I am assuming that after reading some of these comments, that my clown loaches are eating them. Any way to prevent this. Perhaps feeding them other live food ? Does anyone know ?

Eugene said...

Kathy, the easiest way to prevent your clown loach from eating tetra is not to put them together in a community tank. Separate them.

Anonymous said...

I just thought I should point out the minimum tank size you have listed for clown loaches is quite a bit too small. According to the folks at loaches.com it should actually be 75g for juveniles and 100+ for adults. I'm guessing the 20g you have listed must be a typo since you have the size of the fish at 10".

Sergio said...

i'm in need of some live Daphnia, water fleas. I heard loaches LOVE them and they are good because they will stay alive in the tank until eaten. Where can I get?

Do you know anything about breeding brine shrimp?

NVQ said...

I didn't realise how big Clown Loaches can get. The guy at the pet shop recommended them to me to help control snails in my tank. I'm not sure how big my tank is as it was given to me second hand and I'm not good with measurements. What is the minimum size tank I should have

Anonymous said...

can I place a clown loach in a tank (40 litres/10gallons of water) with 2 red eared terrapins (each 10cm/4inch long) to keep the snail population under control, if I have a lot of hiding places?

Eugene said...

Well, 10 gallons is a bit small for 2 terrapins and 1 clown loach. Especially when the fish grows bigger.

Regards,

Eugene

Anonymous said...

Thanks Eugene re that and great article

Ang said...

Great Info there! Just one question, I've got 7 clown loaches about 2.5", I feed them live worms every other day, and boy do they love em! How fast do these fish normally grow? AND is there a diet or other means by which I could possibly speed up their growth rate? I really love these guys and would like to see them thrive. Currently they are in a 180 gallon tank, which I hope to upgrade to a 10' by 3' by 2.5' within the year.

judy said...

what kind of worms do you feed crown loaches, is it the usual ground warms. I do give my one frozen blood warms which it loves but would like more variety if possible

judy said...

i have only one crown loach do you thing it needs more for company. It is in a 20 gallon community tank. Is about 1 and 1/2 inches long.