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FACTSHEETS: March 2025 - no. 345

 Hoplisoma cochui (Myers & Weitzman, 1954)


he talk of the catfish hobby at the end of 2024 was of course the changes to the Corydoradinae family (Dias et al. 2024) and the split to new genera's and the reinstating of old lineages of Hoplisoma Swainson, 1838, Gastrodermus Cope, 1878, and Osteogaster Cope 1894. Our second factsheet leading on from last months look at
Hoplisoma axelrodi is a small species that is not often seen in the hobby, Hoplisoma cochui.


Hoplisoma cochui

    Hoplisoma cochui

 

In the 1980s and 90s this species was mixed up and imported alongside Hoplisoma habrosum from Colombia and was mostly thought of as this species. When H. cochui was eventually imported from Brazil it was given the C-number of C022 which untill recently was thought to be H. cochui but since a new paper in 2018 by V.C. Espíndola et al. it was discovered that C022 was a different species altogether and has now been given the new name of Hoplisoma benattii. The difference is in the body markings where H. cochui has 4 blotches and H. habrosus 3. In place of the large blotch in the caudal peduncle of H. habrosum, H. cochui has 2 smaller spots situated between the adipose fin and the caudal peduncle (where the tail meets the body). Weitzman redescribed this species again in 1956.


Lineage: Placed in Lineage 9, the "short-snouted" species with the designated type species: C. punctatus. A revision in the future would constitute the resurrection of the genus name Hoplisoma (Agassiz, 1846). As of the latest revision (Dias et al 2024) Corydoras cochui has now been placed in Lineage 9 and has the new genus name of Hoplisoma.

 

Hoplisoma benattii

Hoplisoma benattii

 

Hoplisoma habrosum

Hoplisoma habrosum

 

The Hoplisoma genera is the largest with, as of 2025, 87 described species and over 100 undescribed C and CW numbers. The genera can be identified by a short rounded head, short rounded snout and a quite stocky to elongate body (Ian A. M. Fuller & Hans-Georg Evers 2024). The members of the Hoplisoma genus reside in Lineage 9 and the rule of thumb is to put only one species of this lineage in your tanks due to possible hybridization but will reside quite happily with other lineages without this trait happening.

 

 

 

Distrbution: Brazil; Upper Araguaia River basin. Type locality: Santa Maria Nova, Rio Araguaya, State of Goiás, Brazil.

 

Araguaia River, river, central Brazil. It rises on the Brazilian Highlands near Alto Araguaia town in eastern Mato Grosso estado (state) and flows north-northeast for 1,632 miles (2,627 km) to its junction with the Tocantins River, at São João do Araguaia. The river’s upper course forms the boundary between Mato Grosso state (west) and Goiás and southern Tocantins states (east).

Remarks: This species is still found on some online sources as Corydoras cochui.

Common Name

Barredtail Corydoras

Synonyms

Corydoras couchi

Family

Callichthyidae

Subfamily

Corydoradinae

Distribution

South America: Brazil; Upper Araguaia River basin. Type locality: Santa Maria Nova, Rio Araguaya, State of Goiás, Brazil.

Size

Male: 3.0cm. (1¼ins). Female  3.5cm. (1½ins)

Temp.

23-26°C (73-79°F)

p.H.

6.0-7.2.

Characteristics

Head short and compact.

Colouration

Body colour light brown or beige. Caudal fin rays have dark brown banding with five transverse rows in total. The dorsal fin has dark brown banding. Four elongated patches of various sizes extend from the the base of the caudal fin to the snout.

Aquarium Care & Compatibility

This is akin to most of this genus, very peaceful, and would be best housed with small to medium sized tankmates such as Tetras, Rasboras and Danios or in a species tank for breeding purposes. Best to purchase 6 individuals or more as they will be happier in a group.

Reproduction

As per standard Corydoras/Hoplisoma breeding structures.

Set them up with preferably more males than females ( a ratio of 2:1 is good ) in a 18" x 12" x 12" tank with either fine gravel or sand with either sponge filter or a corner filter box with a good current. Install some java moss or wool mops, this gives the females a choice of where to place their eggs but you will probably find that they will mostly lay them on the glass anyway. A temperature in the mid-seventies is good with a p.H around about the neutral (7) mark. Feed a diet of frozen or live food such as bloodworm, whiteworm (sparingly because of the fat content) grindleworm, daphnia and a good quality flake or tablet food. Make a 50% water change, when you notice the female(s) have fattened up, with water that is cooler so as to bring the temperature down. A good idea is to also add a small internal filter to push the water around the aquarium which will also oxygenate it. If successful you can either take the adults out and leave the eggs in the main tank or reverse it and take the eggs out by rolling them of the tank sides with your fingers into a small hatching tank, you can then decide to add a anti-fungus remedy or to leave alone. If you make the wrong choice and the eggs fungus you will get another chance as once Hoplisoma start to breed the first time they will carry on using the afore-mentioned process. There are no hard and fast rules to breeding Cory's but the above method works for me and countless other breeders, you may find another method that suits you, as long as you are successful, that's what matters.

Sexual differences

Males will usually posses pointed ventral fins with the females having a more of a rounded pair. The best bet is to look down on the species and you can sex the individuals by the females girth being fuller, if mature, just behind the ventrals.

Diet

Feeding is not a problem as they will readily consume commercial foods such as flake, granular and tablet foods and frozen foods such as bloodworms and daphnia, like all fish they benefit from regular feedings of live foods such as Daphnia, Cyclops, Grindal worms and bloodworms.

Glossary of Terms

Caudal fin: The tail.
Caudal peduncle: The narrow part of a fish's body to which the caudal or tail fin is attached.
Dorsal fin: The primary rayed fin(s) on top of the body.

Ventral fins:
The paired fins, between the pectorals and the anal fins.

Etymology

Hoplisoma: hóplon, shield or armor; soma, body, referring to bony plates on sides.
cochui: In honour of German-born tropical-fish importer Ferdinand (Fred) Cochu, Paramount Aquarium (New York City, USA), who collected the holotype.

References

Alexandrou, Markos & Taylor, Martin. (2011). Evolution, ecology and taxonomy of the Corydoradinae revisited.
Angelica C Dias, Luiz F C Tencatt, Fabio F Roxo, Gabriel de Souza da Costa Silva, Sérgio A Santos, Marcelo R Britto, Martin I Taylor, Claudio Oliveira, Phylogenomic analyses in the complex Neotropical subfamily Corydoradinae (Siluriformes: Callichthyidae) with a new classification based on morphological and molecular data, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2024;, zlae053.

Espíndola, V.C. Tencatt, L.F.C. Pupo, F.M. Villa-Verde, L. & Britto, M.R. 2018. From the inside out: a new species of armoured catfsh Corydoras with the description of poorly-explored character sources (Teleostei, Siluriformes, Callichthyidae).
Ferraris, C.J. Jr., 2007. Checklist of catfishes, recent and fossil (Osteichthyes: Siluriformes), and catalogue of siluriform primary types. Zootaxa 1418:1-628.
Fuller, Ian A.M. & Evers, Hans-Georg: Identifying Corydoradinae Catfish. 2005. 384 p.
Ian A. M. Fuller & Hans-Georg Evers (2011). Identifying Corydoradinae Catfish Supplement 1. Ian Fuller Enterprises.
Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade (ICMBio). 2022. Corydoras cochui. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2022.

The ETYFish Project Fish Name Etymology Database © Christopher Scharpf.

IUCN Red List

Hoplisoma cochui is endemic to Brazil and is known from the middle and upper reaches of the Araguaia and Xingu river basins. Although there is ornamental interest in the species, the pressure of this possible impact is not known. The species is frequent and abundant in the main channel of the Xingu River and in tributaries of the Araguaia River. No threats that put its population at risk have been identified, therefore it has been categorized as Least Concern (LC), (IUCN 2018).

Photo Credits

© Ian Fuller @CorydorasWorld
© Danny Blundell
© Map: Encyclopædia Britannica.

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