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  #1  
Old February 12th 06, 01:46 PM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
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Default Flounder

I had to pick up a couple flounder at my local oddball fishstore, I love em.
The guy told me that he had no idea what species they were because there are
soo many species. He also had no idea of how large they'd grow, though he
said that he never saw one any bigger than 5".

So, how do I identify these suckers (pun intended)? Or, where is there a
good website where I might read up on these boogers?

-Muuurgh


  #2  
Old February 12th 06, 02:26 PM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
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Default Flounder

In article ews.net,
Muuurgh wrote:
I had to pick up a couple flounder at my local oddball fishstore, I love em.
The guy told me that he had no idea what species they were because there are
soo many species. He also had no idea of how large they'd grow, though he
said that he never saw one any bigger than 5".

So, how do I identify these suckers (pun intended)? Or, where is there a
good website where I might read up on these boogers?


They're on some old fish books I have. They're nippy and only eat live
foods apparantly. I doubt either are actually true as nearly all the fish
these books say only eat live food will do just fine on say, TetraMin.

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  #3  
Old February 12th 06, 04:08 PM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
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Default Flounder

Thusly "Muuurgh" Spake Unto All:

I had to pick up a couple flounder at my local oddball fishstore, I love em.
The guy told me that he had no idea what species they were because there are
soo many species. He also had no idea of how large they'd grow, though he
said that he never saw one any bigger than 5".

So, how do I identify these suckers (pun intended)? Or, where is there a
good website where I might read up on these boogers?


I definitely wont presume to know how to identify them, but you might
find this interesting:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebI...lattiefaqs.htm


  #4  
Old February 12th 06, 05:27 PM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
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Default Flounder

"Richard Sexton" wrote in message
...
In article ews.net,
Muuurgh wrote:
I had to pick up a couple flounder at my local oddball fishstore, I
love em.
The guy told me that he had no idea what species they were because
there are
soo many species. He also had no idea of how large they'd grow, though
he
said that he never saw one any bigger than 5".

So, how do I identify these suckers (pun intended)? Or, where is there
a
good website where I might read up on these boogers?


They're on some old fish books I have. They're nippy and only eat live
foods apparantly. I doubt either are actually true as nearly all the
fish
these books say only eat live food will do just fine on say, TetraMin.

--
Need Mercedes parts ? - http://parts.mbz.org
Richard Sexton | Mercedes stuff: http://mbz.org



I would treat them similarly to stingrays. Fine sand substrate, feed
bloodworms, brine shrimp, small crickets, bottom feeder pellets etc.
Experiment a little. They sound relatively docile, so I would be careful
about the company you give them.

There are freshwater and brackish flounders (sole, flatfish etc). I've
read that the brackish fish have some adaptability to freshwater, but I'm
sure this varies by their age and the species. You might start with
googling images to see if you can determine the species, ie: if North
American:
http://species.fishindex.com/species...lounder.h tml
http://www.fishbase.org/Summary/Spec...sname=lineatus

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