Banjo catfish
Bunocephalus coracoideus
Also known as: Bunocephalus coracoideus, Guitarrita, Two-colored banjo catfish
Quick facts
- Adult size
- 12 cm
- Lifespan
- can live up to 8 years
- Tank zone
- bottom
- Temperament
- peaceful
- Difficulty
- beginner
- Typically wild-caught
- yes - acclimate slowly
Water parameters
- Temperature
- 22–28°C
- pH
- 5.5 to 7.5
- Hardness
- 2 to 15 dGH
Tank requirements
- Minimum volume
- 80 L
- Minimum length
- 60 cm
- Flow
- low
- Lighting
- dim preferred
- Substrate
- sand
- Hiding spots
- needed
Feeding
Diet: carnivore, feeds primarily at the bottom.
Sinking carnivore pellets, frozen bloodworms, live blackworms. Feeds strictly at night; drops food near it after lights-out. Easily outcompeted by active feeders. Check that it's actually eating by looking for waste near its hiding spot in the morning.
Nocturnal feeder; drop food after lights out so it can eat without competition.
Compatibility
- Shaped like a banjo: flat head, narrow tail stalk. Buries itself in sand with only the eyes visible. You will think it's dead. It's not. It does this for 23 hours a day
- One of the least active fish in the hobby. It sits in one spot, buried, for days at a time. Movement happens at night. If you want something you'll see, buy something else
- Peaceful with everything because it ignores everything. Compatible with any fish that won't eat it
- Will eat shrimp at night. The ambush is how it feeds in the wild: sits motionless on the substrate until something walks over its mouth
- Easy to keep alive but easy to accidentally starve. The main failure mode is not starvation from refusal but from faster tankmates eating all the food before the banjo catfish moves
Habitat
Native to rivers in the Amazon basin, Bolivia, Paraguay, and Uruguay. Found buried in sand and leaf litter on the river bottom. The flattened body and rough textured skin provide camouflage against sandy substrates. Multiple Bunocephalus species are sold under the same common name.
Breeding
Rarely bred in captivity. Scatters eggs on the substrate after a large water change with cooler water. The flat body shape makes it nearly impossible to sex externally, though gravid females are slightly plumper. Fry are extremely small and need infusoria. Most breeding reports come from accidental spawns discovered by finding tiny fry, not intentional breeding projects.
Common problems
The main issue is people thinking they're dead. Banjo catfish are among the most sedentary fish in the hobby. They bury themselves in the substrate and remain motionless for days or weeks, emerging only at night to feed. Owners regularly assume they've died and can't find the body, only to discover the fish alive during a substrate clean. Ensure they're actually eating by placing food near their hiding spot after lights out and checking for leftovers in the morning.
Bioload
Bioload coefficient: 2.0 (medium catfish that barely moves and eats infrequently; low waste for its size).
Bioload coefficients are calibrated against the neon tetra as the anchor (1.0). See the methodology page for the formula and how each value was derived.
Plan a tank with Banjo catfish
Verified against: seriouslyfish, planet-catfish. Last reviewed 2026-05-14.