Page 21 of 46

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 09 Apr 2022, 03:20
by Viktor Jarikov
The two piraiba fed to the max:


Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 10 Apr 2022, 02:35
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 12 Apr 2022, 02:14
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 14 Apr 2022, 02:38
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 14 Apr 2022, 02:48
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 15 Apr 2022, 02:16
by Viktor Jarikov
Our pbass stats so far - age and size at death:

Farmie 1.5 years old 19”
Occelaris 6 years old 21”
Orino 5 years old 17”
Orino 5 21”
Orino 5 22”
Orino 5 22”
Orino 5 25”
Azul 5 20”
Azul 5 20”
Kelzul 5 21”
Kelzul 5 21”
Kelzul 5 25”
Temensis 5 30”
Intermedia 3yo 22"


Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 16 Apr 2022, 03:23
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 17 Apr 2022, 03:30
by Viktor Jarikov
A far smaller 8" mahseer was found to chase and bite the tinfoils and the balas for 3 days. So they had to go into a 240 gal until a better option presents itself:


Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 19 Apr 2022, 02:40
by Viktor Jarikov
Indeed, after some time, cichlids probably cannot be kept with goldfish and koi:


Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 20 Apr 2022, 03:25
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 21 Apr 2022, 02:31
by Viktor Jarikov
Mahseer continue to surprise:


Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 22 Apr 2022, 03:30
by Viktor Jarikov
Floyd the flowerhorn largely healed up and doing well:


Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 23 Apr 2022, 03:33
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 24 Apr 2022, 03:59
by Viktor Jarikov
Has anyone experienced gulpers biting fins of another gulper?

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 24 Apr 2022, 06:25
by bekateen
Cool video Viktor! Do you think this is courtship behavior? Have gulpers been spawned in aquaria? :YMPRAY:

Cheers, Eric

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 26 Apr 2022, 03:28
by Viktor Jarikov
Thank you Eric! I don't have firm answers to either of your questions yet, sorry. Working on it.

...

Meanwhile


Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 27 Apr 2022, 03:29
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 28 Apr 2022, 02:48
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 29 Apr 2022, 03:32
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 30 Apr 2022, 02:31
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 01 May 2022, 01:59
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 03 May 2022, 02:13
by Viktor Jarikov
A third asotus passed away. 8 years old. 16 inch / 40 cm. Male. IDK why. The full bely is still full of food - a day before it fed as usual with an enviable appetite and much gusto. They always feed like this.

I don't think this involved any kind of tank mate attack. The only guess is that since it swallowed 3 pieces of cut herring, perhaps a bone could be fathomed to have punctured the stomach and a vital organ, pretty weak hypothesis.


Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 04 May 2022, 03:41
by Viktor Jarikov
Overnight the jerks in the jerk tank left nothing but bones of the behri. Final size seems around 10" at 3.5 yo. As stated, the fish grew ok the first year, year and a half - 2.5" in 4 months, then 4" in the following year, then 1" in the next two years.

This means it was feeding ok at the beginning but something kept shifting in its feeding habits and it fed less and less over time, while wasting away and not growing much.

Based on our experience, it seems that some mouth-sucking grazing cyprinids, such as Black shark aka Labeo chrysophekadion, also Labeo congoro are able to learn to take dry feeds like pellets and occasionally thawed fish and attain adult ages and sizes in our hobby rather easily, while others, such as behri, and Cirrhinus microlepis as another example, are unable and perhaps require to be kept in conditions where algae and plankton are plentiful.

From literature:

http://www.fishbase.us/summary/SpeciesS ... name=behri "Occurs in upland reaches of the Mekong. Inhabits rocky stretches of the main stem of Mekong during the dry season and moves into tributary streams during high waters. Found in riffle and slow deep reaches. Herbivorous, feeding on algae, phytoplankton and periphyton. Not known to persist in impoundments. At Stung Treng below the Khone Falls, the species migrates upstream at the start of the rainy season in May-June and downstream in the dry season from November to February. At Sambor and Kratie as well as just south of Khone Falls, it moves downstream at the onset of the rainy season and upstream in the dry season. The reason for such movement seems to be the presence of the important tributary system, Sekong-Sesan-Srepok rivers. Fishermen reported that this fish migrates from this system into the Mekong during receding water and migrates upstream the tributaries during the rainy season, possibly to spawn. Upstream the Khone Falls, this fish begins migrating upstream in the dry season (February-May) and continues into the beginning of the rainy season. This movement may, in fact, be two separate migrations: a dry season non-reproductive migration of smaller fish and an early rainy season migration of larger fish in spawning condition. Undertakes upstream migrations from Khone Falls all the way to Chiang Khong in northern Thailand which are triggered by the increase of water levels and the change in water-color from clear to red-brown. Migrates upstream in schools together with other cyprinids such as Labeo cf. pierrei, Cirrhinus microlepis, Labeo chrysophekadion and Cyclocheilichthys enoplos as well as the loach, Botia modesta. Marketed fresh."

https://www.seriouslyfish.com/species/i ... beo-behri/ "A specialized grazer of algae and associated organisms which it rasps from the surface of rocks and other solid objects using its specialised mouthparts."

https://www.mekongfishnetwork.org/bump- ... beo-behri/ "In the Mekong basin, an unusual bump-headed fish called Incisilabeo behri (also known as Bangana behri) migrates out of the Sesan, Srepok and Srepok (the 3S) rivers as juveniles into the mainstream Mekong. They may head downstream to the border of Kratie and Stung Treng Province, or upstream to southern Laos PDR and northeastern Thailand for feeding purposes (grazing on algae on rocks). The species spawns in the middle of the Sekong River in July and August. The maximum size recorded is 60 cm. Wonders of the Mekong project staff came across this colorful specimen for sale at a market in Stung Treng, Cambodia.

In Attapeu and Sekong Provinces in southern Laos, villagers have created protected areas to that have helped conserve this species in the dry season, and have also made attempts to ban fishing during its spawning season. Incisilabeo behri is listed in the IUCN Red List as “Vulnerable” (Red List in 2011), and major threats include being targeted with gillnets during the spawning season and feeding migrations. The increasing use of electrofishing gear and dams proposed on the Mekong and 3S rivers could have a major negative effect on the species during its migration. More research and conservation planning is needed to understand and protect this unique Mekong fish species!"


Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 05 May 2022, 03:06
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 06 May 2022, 04:15
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 07 May 2022, 03:05
by Viktor Jarikov
Justina the marbled pim ripped up by piraiba first and then by an apurensis catfish has been recovering for a month and introduced back into her 4500 gal where she had lived 7 years prior:


Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 08 May 2022, 02:51
by Viktor Jarikov
The last of the 11 adult tig catfish is gone, the same way as the prior 8 - first hunger strike for months, then spinning, erratic swimming as the final stage. The first 3 we had lost to accidents. We have kept them from 2015 until 2022. Last tig looks like a male, 22", 8 yo.


Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 09 May 2022, 03:02
by Viktor Jarikov
The mud carp is moved into isolation to experiment with the feed:


Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 10 May 2022, 02:26
by Viktor Jarikov

Re: My Public Aquarium: exhibit blues - how to make them?

Posted: 11 May 2022, 03:02
by Viktor Jarikov