he common name for this
Dorad catfish is the Long-nosed Raphael Catfish
to differentiate it from the similar looking Raphael
Catfish Platydoras
armulatus (previously
known as P.costatus). The genus Orinocodoras
is Monotypic (containing only one species). In the
U.K. the common name for P.armulatus is usually
Humbug or Chocolate Talking Catfish
pertaining to them being able to create a sound by
grating their fin bones in each socket and amplifying
the noise via the swim bladder, this also applies
to O.eigenmanni.
Orinocodoras eigenmanni
This fish is probably imported alongside P. armulatus, for if you look into a tank of the latter in any shop you will usually find one or two 0. eigenmanni there. They are quite easy to spot with experience, as O. eigenmanni, as the common name suggests, has a longer nose, plus the scutes that adorn the sides of the body are smaller, and I find that it is usually a bit darker in colouration than P. armulatus. This is a very nocturnal catfish, so give it plenty of hiding places such as pipes or rockwork and you will get the added bonus of seeing it on the odd occasion.
As can be seen in the photograph this can be a very impressive looking catfish when adult and in common with P. armulatus it can get quite heavy in the body.
[画像:Orinocodoras eigenmanni - showing scutes]
Orinocodoras eigenmanni- showing scutes
The picture above shows the impressive scutes that adorn both sides of its body.
Long-nosed Raphael Catfish
None
Doradidae
Doradinae
South America: Orinoco River basin: Venezuela. Type locality: Venezuela: Caño de Quiribana near Caicara.
17.5cm (7ins)
23-26ºC (73-79ºF)
6.0-7.0
Adipose; Continued
forward very slightly into a keel.
Body; 29 lateral scutes, all fairly
even in size. The plates are all small leaving much
of the sides of the body naked.
Caudal Peduncle; Covered with caudal
fulcra above and below.
Dorsal Spine; Serrated on both anterior
and posterior edges.
Fontanel; Continued as a groove to
the base of the dorsal fin.
Body black with a creamy white lateral stripe from the eye, running along the lateral plates and faintly continuing through the caudal fin. Underside of head and coracoid, white to cream. Belly is darkly mottled. Dorsal lightish mottled, the first soft ray and membrane blackish. Leading edge of the dorsal spine light.
This is quite a peaceful catfish in a aquarium with similar sized tankmates, but I wouldn't advise keeping them with small characins, such as neon's, as this fish foraging at night would view them as lunch!, but apart from that a good addition to a tank instead of the more common P. armulatus.
Not recorded.
Will eat anything hence the body shape it attains. You could also feed tablet food at lights out, just to make sure that it is getting its fair share. If you feed your usual fare to your aquarium inhabitants you will usually find a very large and fat O. eigenmanni the odd times that you do view it.
Caudal
Peduncle - The area between the dorsal fin
and the tail.
Fontanel
- The space(s) between the bones on top of the skull
covered by skin.
Orinocodoras:
From the Orinoco River; doras = cuirass (helmeted).
eigenmanni: In
honour of German-born American ichthyologist Carl
H. Eigenmann (1863–1927), “who recently
[1925] placed the classification of the Doradidae
on a firm foundation”.
This species is assessed as Least Concern given its widespread distribution and suspected stable population (IUCN 2022).
DoNascimiento,
CD, Herrera-Collazos, E.E., Mojica, J.I., Rodríguez-Olarte,
D., Taphorn, D.C. & Usma, S.
2022. Orinocodoras eigenmanni. The IUCN Red List of
Threatened Species 2022.
Northern Area Catfish Group:Information
sheet 08.
The
ETYFish Project
Fish Name Etymology Database © Christopher Scharpf.
Top image: © Allan
James @ ScotCat
Bottom image: © Billy Grant
If you would like to contribute to the monthly factsheets with an
article, information or photos, please e-mail
me. You will of course be credited for your work.
If you would like to donate any denomination of money to the site just click the above link button. All proceeds will go to running the site and hopefully to keep it going for a few years yet.
ScotCat Sources
Article Article
Etymology = Genus Etymology-genera
Etymology = Genus Etymology-specific name
Online Sources
Search Search
Fishbase Fishbase
Wikipedia Wikipedia
Catalog of Fishes Catalog of Fishes
Global Biodiversity Information Facility GBIF
FishNet2 Fishnet2
iNaturalist iNaturalist
IUCN IUCN