So I took a chance and moved it over here where there are still some diatoms, green spot algae and fungus growing out of driftwood. Even though plenty of trumpet snails in here too, and far more visible limpets, it seems like the oto is finding more food now. I did a slow acclimation but for the first day it looked pale and was breathing hard. Now its tummy is rounded again, and it moves about busy nibbling on surfaces again. It's cleaned all the diatoms off, but appears to be finding enough on wood and plants for the time being.
It is kind of cute, and also rather sad, that it hangs out with my cories at the substrate level sometimes. I wonder if it finds their company a bit companionable.
Incidentally, when I was taking closeups of the oto among cories, I noticed this one catfish seems to have a bent tail- on the right
Before I thought well, maybe it just lets its tail drift up when resting. But when I look at the others- you can see it even though the photo is a bit blurry- their tails remain straight whether scavenging or at rest.
I hope it is just a birth defect and not an early sign of fish tuberculosis.
No comments:
Post a Comment