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Recent content by gzeiger
The friendliest place on the web for anyone with an interest in aquariums or fish keeping!
If you have answers, please help by responding to the unanswered posts.
Four days is not too long, but it certainly requires some care. As with fish, many of the tropical will be sensitive to cold. If they are traveling with you in a car, just pay attention to bring their bucket inside with you promptly when you stop for the night and they should be fine...
At the risk of sounding rude, I think what is needed here is an attitude adjustment. Pond snails are at least as interesting to watch as most fish. I struggle to keep some around because most of my (native) fish eat them voraciously, but even in a heavily infested tank they are really fun to...
There's nothing wrong here. They like to suck on to glass. Couldn't say why, except to note that they have no idea it's transparent (from his up-close angle he would see a reflection of something distant within the tank).
Check out the North American Native Fish Association for the best advice on this one.
Chrysotus are wonderful aquarium fish. They are moderately aggressive feeders, but very peaceful toward tankmates. True to their name they will pretty much stay right at the top much of the time, leaving lots...
I do use a lot of feeders and have no objection to feeding fish. I just wouldn't net them out of the pet store's feeder tank and put them in mine. Ich in every tank would be getting off lightly I think.
That picture with the bloodworm really puts his size in perspective. It will be a few...
I guess there's not much for scale in your pictures, but at the size it looks like he is I doubt he could get a feeder fish in his mouth. Frozen foods are much more cost-effective and healthier anyway. I wouldn't ever feed a fish I like a feeder straight from the pet store :eek:
Next time you see him take a few minutes and really get familiar with what his eyes look like. Much of the time that's all you'll be able to find.
It is really cool to see when they stick on the glass though.
It would be very difficult to drop sand through water at a high enough density to trap a fish, but if you had he was dead before you posted to ask about it. Their gills are on the top and bottom and can get held shut.
They don't bury deep, but they can change the color of their skin over a broad range like a chameleon (limited to browns and grays, but they can go the full range from white to cream to dark brown). Again, you may have a different species than I am talking about - you should ask that question...
You're going to have to figure out what the species is to get a really optimal answer on that. Trinectes maculatus, the hogchoker sole, is commonly sold as "freshwater flounder" and will be fine for a year or more in straight fresh water, but there are other possibilities. Andy is quite correct...