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The lavender spiny eel is the dwarf of the spiny eel family — staying under 8 inches at full adult size and content in tanks as small as 30 gallons. The body shows a delicate lilac iridescence under cool-spectrum lighting, especially in well-conditioned specimens. It is the only spiny eel small and peaceful enough for nano-community setups, and one of the few that tolerates conspecific groups without serious aggression.
Native range: South Asia (India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Myanmar, Nepal). The lavender spiny eel is a member of the Spiny eel (Mastacembelidae) family and shares the characteristic elongated body plan, sand-burrowing behavior, and nocturnal hunting style that defines its relatives. Aquarium specimens enter the trade from a mix of wild-caught monsoon-season collection and limited captive breeding programs in source countries. Buyers should ask the vendor about source country and acclimation history before purchase — a quality vendor will know whether their specimen has been quarantined and trained to take prepared foods, which dramatically affects the success rate at home.
Tank size: 30 gallons is the practical minimum for a single adult specimen. Larger species and group-keeping require proportionally larger systems. Substrate is the single most important husbandry detail: fine pool-filter sand (1-3mm grain) is mandatory. Gravel and crushed coral abrade the slime coat and lead to skin lesions, secondary infection, and accelerated mortality. Build the substrate 2-4 inches deep so the eel can burrow with only its head exposed during daylight hours.
Hardscape: provide multiple cave structures — smooth river rock, PVC pipe segments (3-6" diameter), or commercial reef rock caves. One cave per eel plus 1-2 extras gives them the territorial flexibility to avoid stress. Lighting should be dim or have heavily-shaded zones; floating plants (water lettuce, Amazon frogbit, salvinia) work well to break up overhead light without compromising plant growth on rooted species below. Filtration: oversize by 2x — most spiny eels are messy eaters and produce significant nitrogenous waste. Canister filter sized for a tank twice the actual gallonage is the safe rule.
Lid: tight-fitting, gap-free, weighted if necessary. All freshwater eels are escape artists. A 1cm gap is enough for a 16" zigzag to find and exploit. Hood-style aquarium lids are usually adequate; rimless tanks need custom-cut acrylic or glass with no gaps around heaters, filter intakes, or air lines.
Primary diet: Micro-carnivore - blackworms, daphnia, frozen baby brine, micro-pellets, finely chopped earthworm. Lavender Spiny Eels are obligate carnivores. Wild specimens eat insect larvae, small fish, crustaceans, and worms; captive diet should approximate this with high-protein meaty foods. Frozen bloodworms, blackworms, mysis shrimp, and chopped earthworm are the staple base. Sinking carnivore pellets (New Life Spectrum, Hikari Vibra Bites, Omega One) can be trained as a supplement once the specimen accepts prepared foods.
Feeding strategy: target-feed with tongs at lights-off or under blue moonlight. Most spiny eels are out-competed in busy community tanks during daytime feeding; delivering food directly to the eel's territory after dark ensures it actually eats. Frequency: 4-5 small meals per week for adults, daily for juveniles under 6". Skip feeding 1-2 days per week to mimic wild feast-famine cycles and prevent obesity in long-term captive specimens.
The first 2-4 weeks after introduction are the highest-risk period for refusing food. Start with live blackworms (irresistible to almost every spiny eel) and transition to frozen and prepared foods over 3-6 weeks once feeding response is established.
Safe: Nano community: ember tetras, chili rasboras, celestial pearl danios, sparkling gouramis, otocinclus, kuhli loach, dwarf shrimp (adult only)..
Avoid: Larger predatory community fish that would intimidate them at feeding time. Avoid mixing with larger spiny eels — lavender will be out-competed for food..
The general rule across all spiny eels: any tank mate must be larger than the eel's mouth (or roughly 30% of the eel's body length) and tolerant of nocturnal disturbance. Stress-prone species like discus and slow-moving fish like angelfish often do poorly with active nocturnal eels even when size matches. Match temperament more than just size.
Reported in captivity. Pair forms after extended cohabitation; eggs scatter in fine-leaved plants. Fry need infusoria → baby brine shrimp progression. Productive small breeding project for keepers willing to set up species-only system.
Outcompeted for food in busy community tanks (target-feed); jumping from open-top tanks; weight loss from dietary monotony — vary food sources weekly.
A 30-gallon long is the practical minimum. The 8" adult size means they need horizontal swimming room more than gallons.
Yes, under cool-spectrum lighting and in well-conditioned specimens. Brown-gray under dim or warm lighting. The iridescence emerges over 3-6 months of stable care.
Among spiny eels, yes. They are small, peaceful, and tolerant of mid-range parameters. But they still require fine sand, a tight lid, and patience with feeding — not a true beginner species.
Yes — they are the most accessible spiny eel for breeding. Heavily planted species-only 30-gallon, monthly water changes, varied live foods. Spawning is often triggered by adding cooler water during partial changes.
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