Fig. 358.—Callichthys littoralis, from South America. ⅔ nat. size.

In this family the eggs and young are usually looked after by the parents. Aristotle observed that the male of the European Silurus glanis watches over and defends the eggs. In one of the commonest North American Cat-Fishes, Amiurus nebulosus, a species which has been largely introduced into some parts of Europe of late, now thriving in many ponds and more or less polluted streams of the Continent, the eggs are deposited near the banks of weedy ponds and rivers without currents, in concealed places beneath logs, stumps, or even in pails or other receptacles, failing which both parents join in excavating a sort of nest in the mud, a work often requiring two or three days of incessant labour. The male watches over the eggs, and later leads the young in great schools near the shore, seemingly caring for them as the hen for her chickens.[[675]] The Doras and the Callichthys of South America, according to Hancock[[676]] and Vipan,[[677]] build regular nests of grass or leaves, sometimes placed in a hole scooped out in the bank, in which they cover their eggs and defend them, male and female sharing in this parental duty. In the likewise South American Corydoras (Callichthys paleatus), as observed by Carbonnier,[[678]] a lengthy courtship takes place, followed by an embrace, during which the female receives the seminal fluid in a sort of pouch formed by the folded membranes of her ventral fins; immediately after, five or six eggs are produced and received in the pouch, to be afterwards carefully placed in a secluded spot. This operation is repeated many times, until the total number of eggs, about 250, have been deposited. In accordance with these pairing habits, the pectoral spines of the male, which are used in amplexation, are longer and stronger than those of the female. These Fish are monogamous, and both parents remain by the side of the nest, furiously attacking any assailant. Dr. R. Semon[[679]] has made observations in Queensland on the habits of Arius australis, which builds nests in the sandy bed of the Burnett River. These nests consist of circular basin-like excavations, about 20 inches in diameter, at the bottom of which the eggs are laid, and covered over by several layers of large stones. A still more efficient protection is afforded their progeny by the marine and estuarine species of Arius,[[680]] Galeichthys,[[681]] and Osteogeniosus,[[682]] the male, more rarely the female, carrying the eggs in the mouth and pharynx; these eggs, few in number, are remarkably large, measuring as much as 17 or 18 millimetres in diameter in Arius commersonii, a Fish of three or four feet in length. According to Babuchin, Malopterurus also is said by the Nile fishermen to shelter its fry in the mouth.

Some of the Silurids attain to a very large size. Among these is the type of the family, Silurus glanis, the "Wels" of the Germans, its only European representative, which occurs over a great part of Europe, but is absent from the British Isles, France, the Spanish Peninsula, and Italy. It is most abundant in the Danube basin, where it sometimes reaches a length of 10 feet or more and a weight of 400 lbs. It is the largest strictly fresh-water Fish of Europe. Among the smallest species, we have to mention the "Candiru" of Brazil, Vandellia cirrhosa, 60 millimetres in length and 3 or 4 in diameter, which is believed to enter and ascend the urethra of people bathing, being attracted by the urine; the Fish, having once made its way into the urethra, cannot be pulled out again, owing to the erectile spines which arm its gill-covers. The natives of some parts of the Amazons are in great dread of this Fish, and protect themselves when entering the water by wearing a sheath formed of a small, minutely-perforated cocoanut-shell suspended from a belt of palm-fibres.[[683]] According to Reinhardt[[684]] the allied Stegophilus insidiosus, a small colourless Fish, 30 to 40 mm. long, from Brazil and Argentine, lives parasitically in the gill-cavity of large Cat-Fishes (Platystoma). Dr. F. Silvestri has noticed that it sucks the blood in the gills of Platystoma coruscans, a Silurid growing to a length of 6 feet.

Fig. 359.—Upper view of heads of Chaetostomus cirrhosus, male and female. (Nat. size.)

Fam. 5. Loricariidae.—Distinguished from the preceding by the sessile ribs and the absence of the transverse processes in the praecaudal vertebrae, which have bifid neural spines. The air-bladder is always much reduced, and enclosed in a right and a left bony capsule formed by the skull and the anterior vertebrae. Gill-openings narrow clefts. The mouth is inferior, with more or less developed circular lips and feeble dentition; it is used as a sucker, by which the Fish fixes itself to any hard object with such strength that it cannot be pulled off without great difficulty. The teeth are usually slender and bicuspid. The food consists of very small prey and more or less putrefied organic substances, the intestine being usually extremely elongate and much convoluted. The habits of these Fish are very little known, but the fact that the males of many species have the pectoral fins much stronger than the females renders it probable that they pair like Callichthys. There are other sexual differences in many species of Plecostomus, Chaetostomus, and Loricaria, as the presence of dermal tentacles on the snout (see Fig. 359), or of hair-like bristles on various parts of the head and fins in the males, which are usually of larger size.

About 200 species are known, all from the tropical and subtropical parts of Central and South America. The largest species (Chaetostomus gigas) measures 2½ feet; many are of very small size.[[685]] The genera may be referred to two sub-families:—

(i.) Arginae.—Body naked; ribs strong. Arges, Stygogenes, Astroblepus.

(ii.) Loricariinae.—Body cuirassed by bony plates; ribs very slender. Plecostomus, Liposarcus, Chaetostomus, Cochliodon, Pterygoplichthys, Rhinelepis, Acanthicus, Otocinclus, Hypoptopoma, Loricaria, Acestra.