To me, 3 looks like an Otocinclus. Don't know how small it is though.
If they are sucking on the sides of other fish it'd have to be SAE, be careful, when these guys get big they can kill your fish quickly.
1. Garra flavatra.1) A mountain loach of some kind.
2) Raphael Cat (I hope I spelled that right).--Talking cat family.
3) Flying fox.
4) Some kind of pleco (but not the common one).
5) Cherry Barb
6) Cuttle fish.![]()
Third one is a Siamese algae eater (looks nothing like a chinese algae eater or sucking loach, don't know how people confuse these) and I'm very surprised it's being aggressive; they generally aren't.
Chinese algae eater (as you can see, totally different markings)
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Fifth one isn't a tetra at all but a cherry barb.
:iagree:looks like an sae to me too. definetly not a cae or flying fox.
What else are in the tank? That is not typical SAE behavior.I'm surprised too, but today I transferred several gouramis to sick bay because they all had suckermark lesions next to their gills. The SAEs were responsible.
:iagree:Thing is, these fish don't even have suckermouths; they're carp and have no teeth at all.
In Chinese algae eaters (CAE), it is true they can get nasty however SAE's are not like that which is why I seriously doubt the claim that SAE's would act like that. And SAE's grow to 5-6 inches only, no more than that.To me, 3 looks like an Otocinclus. Don't know how small it is though.
If they are sucking on the sides of other fish it'd have to be SAE, be careful, when these guys get big they can kill your fish quickly.
Yes.The ones in the tank are well over the size limit for otocinclus. Like, 3-4 inches.