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Last year, an unidentified cichlid appeared in my roommate's feeder
fish (for her turtles.) He never got eaten, and by the time he got about three inches long, we took him out and put him in a ten gallon of his own. He's now around four inches, a dark bronze with faint iridescense, blue iridescent line patterns below his eyes and a black spot rimmed with yellow/bronze iridescence on his gill covers. His fins are edged with white. I have no idea what he is, but he's certainly aggressive and has a big mouth. But yes, anyway, so yesterday he ate a praying mantis. My question is...is this going to harm him at all? He pretty much ate her whole. I'm afraid of all those sharp exoskeletal edges maybe tearing him up inside. Not to mention that it doesn't seem possible that a four inch fish should be able to eat a three inch bug as thick as my pinky finger. So, any thoughts? |
#2
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![]() "Audra Johnson" wrote in message om... Last year, an unidentified cichlid appeared in my roommate's feeder fish (for her turtles.) He never got eaten, and by the time he got about three inches long, we took him out and put him in a ten gallon of his own. He's now around four inches, a dark bronze with faint iridescense, blue iridescent line patterns below his eyes and a black spot rimmed with yellow/bronze iridescence on his gill covers. His fins are edged with white. I have no idea what he is, but he's certainly aggressive and has a big mouth. But yes, anyway, so yesterday he ate a praying mantis. My question is...is this going to harm him at all? He pretty much ate her whole. I'm afraid of all those sharp exoskeletal edges maybe tearing him up inside. Not to mention that it doesn't seem possible that a four inch fish should be able to eat a three inch bug as thick as my pinky finger. So, any thoughts? Not only is that a $1,000,000 federal fine, but at least 10 years of bad luck! -- JK Sinrod NY Sinrod Stained Glass www.sinrodstudios.com Coney Island Memories www.sinrodstudios.com/coneymemories |
#3
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"jk" wrote in message .net...
"Audra Johnson" wrote in message om... Last year, an unidentified cichlid appeared in my roommate's feeder fish (for her turtles.) He never got eaten, and by the time he got about three inches long, we took him out and put him in a ten gallon of his own. He's now around four inches, a dark bronze with faint iridescense, blue iridescent line patterns below his eyes and a black spot rimmed with yellow/bronze iridescence on his gill covers. His fins are edged with white. I have no idea what he is, but he's certainly aggressive and has a big mouth. But yes, anyway, so yesterday he ate a praying mantis. My question is...is this going to harm him at all? He pretty much ate her whole. I'm afraid of all those sharp exoskeletal edges maybe tearing him up inside. Not to mention that it doesn't seem possible that a four inch fish should be able to eat a three inch bug as thick as my pinky finger. So, any thoughts? Not only is that a $1,000,000 federal fine, but at least 10 years of bad luck! ....Well, I didn't *feed* her to him on purpose...I was sprucing up her ten gallon tank and about to feed her some crickets. My boyfriend was holding her, unaware that she could fly, and plop, she landed in the tank. And chomp went my fish. I *love* praying mantises, I'd never feed to something on purpose... |
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Audra Johnson wrote:
Last year, an unidentified cichlid appeared in my roommate's feeder fish (for her turtles.) He never got eaten, and by the time he got about three inches long, we took him out and put him in a ten gallon of his own. He's now around four inches, a dark bronze with faint iridescense, blue iridescent line patterns below his eyes and a black spot rimmed with yellow/bronze iridescence on his gill covers. His fins are edged with white. I have no idea what he is, but he's certainly aggressive and has a big mouth. Not totally related to your original question, but you might want to identify this fish properly so you can give it a suitably sized home. One thing to consider, based on the spot on the gill cover, is that you have a sunfish instead of a cichlid. This is especially probable if the feeder fish were from an outside water source in the USA. Sunfish are all over the place in the USA waterways. They resemble cichlids in shape too. You can try doing a web search for pictures. Bluegill (a common sunfish) is another name to search for. They're often caught in sports fishing, so a page of that sort might have good identifying pictures. There are also cichlids which have a gill spot, although most have other markings as well. One which might fit your description that comes to mind is one of the Neolamprologous brichardi/pulcher complex of African cichlids. There are some of those that have nice irridescent patterns under the eyes although they usually have two dark spots/stripes. Some of the various African species lumped under "tilapia" also resemble that coloration. You should look through a good book like Loiselle's "The Cichlid Aquarium" or other picture oriented reference books to see if you can find your fish. I suspect you'll find the fish will get larger than 4" and will need a larger home in the future. If that is the case, you may want to save up for that instead of spending money further furnishing its current home. |
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Audra Johnson wrote:
Wow. I *really* did want to identify him, but wasn't sure if it could be possible until I could take a picture of him, perhaps. Anyhow, your pointer really *did* help. From what I've found out, you're right, he's not a cichlid -- he's a green sunfish. a href="http://www.cnr.vt.edu/efish/families/greensun.html"http://www.cnr.vt.edu/efish/families/greensun.html/a I'm not even sure if I *can* keep him in an aquarium, really. I mean, he's a *sporting* fish, geez mateez. So now I really don't know what to do with him! You may want to check with your local fish and game department about what to do with it if you can't house it and also to see if it is even legal to keep as an aquarium/pond fish. Explain how it accidently came into your possession and you only recently identified it and that will hopefully (IANAL though) prevent any legal problems unless you obtained those feeder fish by dipping a net in a local stream (then you've got fishing license issues I think). If it's legal to keep in your area, you could ask around for someone with a pond who might want to adopt it or even put in a small pond for it in your own backyard. Above all else, do NOT release it into any waterways (rivers, streams, natural ponds, etc). That is illegal in any US state even if keeping it in a backyard pond or an aquarium is considered legal. |
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