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FishFreshwaterIntermediate

Curated catalog

Upside-down catfish

Synodontis nigriventris

The catfish that swims upside-down — a unique behavior in fishkeeping that defies gravity. Pigmentation is reversed from normal fish: the belly is darker than the back (counter-shading), an adaptation to inverted swimming for camouflage when seen from below. Native to the Congo basin. Gregarious and nocturnal: in groups of 3–6+ becomes more confident. Feeds on the underside of leaves and at the water surface. Excellent longevity: 10–15 years. Young swim normally and develop inverted behavior at ~7–8 weeks.

Family
Mochokidae
Origin
Kongo-Brazzaville, Kongo-Kinshasa
Tank use
Used in 0 tanks
Temperature

21 °C - 26 °C

pH

6 - 8

Water type

Freshwater

Tank level

Zona superiore (invertito!) e intermedia

Adult size

9.6 cm

Description

Geographical Origin & Biotope:

Endemic to the immense, sprawling Congo River basin in Central Africa, specifically documented in the Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Cameroon. Synodontis nigriventris (the Upside-Down Catfish) naturally colonizes heavily vegetated, slow-moving marginal zones, deeply flooded riverbanks, and stagnant rainforest pools. These environments are characterized by dense, overhanging vegetation and an absolute abundance of submerged logs, roots, and aquatic plants where they spend their lives grazing the undersides of leaves and branches.

Taxonomy & Morphology:

Scientifically classified within the Mochokidae family (the "squeaker" catfishes), it is the most famous member of its genus due to its remarkable evolutionary adaptation. Taxonomically, its specific name "nigriventris" translates directly to "black-bellied." Morphologically, it possesses a stocky, robust, scaleless body equipped with sharp dorsal and pectoral spines (capable of inflicting a painful sting) and complex, branched barbels. Its most defining physical trait is its specialized swim bladder, which allows it to permanently and effortlessly swim upside-down.

Social Behavior:

They are exceptionally peaceful, predominantly nocturnal, and highly gregarious catfish. Unlike many territorial Synodontis species, S. nigriventris absolutely relies on a group (minimum 5-6, ideally more) for psychological security. During the day, they form massive, intertwined colonial groups, resting completely upside-down under broad leaves, driftwood overhangs, or inside ceramic tubes. At night, they become highly active, breaking formation to meticulously graze the undersides of plant leaves and the water surface for food.

Coloration & Sexual Dimorphism:

Sexual dimorphism is distinct in mature adults. Females are significantly larger (reaching 9-10 cm), vastly plumper across the belly, and exhibit a slightly duller, more muted coloration. Males remain smaller (around 6-7 cm) and possess a more sharply pointed dorsal fin. The coloration represents a unique evolutionary reversal of counter-shading (camouflage). The back (which points downward) is a light, mottled silvery-grey. The belly (which points upward) is starkly dark brown or black, perfectly camouflaging them against the dark river bottom when viewed from above.

Care and observations

Tank Setup:

The aquarium architecture must cater to their absolute biological need to rest and feed upside-down. A minimum 100-liter tank is required for a group. The layout MUST feature extensive, massive overhanging structures: large pieces of branching driftwood (spider wood), flat slate caves, and dense thickets of broad-leaved plants (like massive Anubias or Amazon Swords). They demand dim lighting; in brightly lit tanks without adequate broad-leaved overhangs, they will suffer from severe chronic stress and refuse to emerge.

Diet & Feeding:

In their natural Congo River habitats, they are highly opportunistic omnivores and meticulous surface/leaf grazers, feeding heavily on aquatic insects, crustaceans, and significant amounts of soft algae and detritus scraped from the undersides of submerged structures. In captivity, they are unfussy but require a sinking, omnivorous diet fed after lights out. They eagerly accept high-quality sinking pellets, algae wafers, and frozen bloodworms. They will frequently swim upside-down at the water surface to snatch floating flakes.

Water Quality:

Originating from the vast Congo basin, they are incredibly hardy, robust, and highly adaptable to various water parameters. They thrive in standard tropical temperatures (22-26°C / 72-79°F) and are comfortable in slightly acidic to slightly alkaline water (pH 6.5 - 7.5) with moderate hardness. While highly adaptable, they prefer slow to moderate filter flow, mimicking the quiet marginal zones of the Congo River, rather than violent, torrential rapids.

Compatibility & Tankmates:

They are the quintessential peaceful catfish for medium-to-large community aquariums. Due to their peaceful nature and robust size, they can be housed with a massive variety of species. Excellent tankmates include African Tetras (Congo Tetras), medium-sized peaceful Cichlids (Kribensis), Gouramis, and large Rasboras. They are safe with plants and will not eat smaller, fast-swimming fish. You must only avoid aggressively territorial bottom-dwellers (like large, aggressive Plecos or massive Cichlids) that might compete for cave space.

Aquarium Breeding:

Breeding is rare but possible in heavily planted, mature aquariums. They are egg-scatterers. To trigger spawning, a heavily conditioned group should be subjected to a simulated rainy season (a massive, cool water change following a dry period). The female will scatter hundreds of slightly adhesive eggs, often aiming them at the undersides of broad leaves or within caves. The adults provide zero parental care and may eat the eggs. The microscopic fry require infusoria and hatch already possessing the instinct to swim upside-down.

Risks & Diseases:

The absolute greatest physical risk is mechanical injury during handling; their dorsal and pectoral spines are serrated, highly venomous, and will easily puncture human skin or become permanently tangled in standard aquarium nets (use solid plastic containers to catch them). Medically, they are virtually indestructible if provided with clean water. However, as scaleless fish, they are highly sensitive to copper-based medications and heavy salt treatments.

Fish profile

Temperament
Pacifico e gregario. Notturno/crepuscolare. Tenere in gruppi di 3–6+
Diet
Onnivoro facile: pellet e wafer affondanti, chironomus, artemia, dafnia vivi o surgelati, zucchine, cetriolo, piselli. Alimentare la sera
Tank level
Zona superiore (invertito!) e intermedia
Minimum group
3
Adult size
9.6 cm
Minimum tank
75 L
GH
7 dGH - 14 dGH
KH
n/a
TDS
n/a
Conductivity
n/a
Feeding frequency
1 volta al giorno (sera)
Bioload
Medium
Flow
Corrente debole a moderata
Reproduction
Rara in cattività. Simulare stagione delle piogge con cambi d'acqua fresca. Deposizione in depressioni o grotte. Avannotti nuotano normalmente fino a 7–8 settimane poi sviluppano il nuoto invertito. Nauplii di artemia, micro-vermi.
Compatibility
Eccellente pesce di comunità: ciclidi nani, tetra, rasbore, pesci pacifici. Evitare pesci grandi e aggressivi.

Image gallery

Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.

Exact live/aquarium image selected from Wikimedia Commons for Synodontis nigriventris.

Exact licensed live observation photo selected from iNaturalist for Synodontis nigriventris.