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On Tue, 29 Jun 2004 00:26:44 +0100, wrote:
On 28 Jun 2004 15:47:29 -0700, (Chip) wrote: other news: my freshwater mooray eel still not eating... thanks to all who gave me suggestions and although many of you just said that there are no such thing as freshwater moray eels, and the internet knowledge base also does not offer too much help, the fact is I have one 16 inch, in my tanganykan tank since january. Nobody is saying that freshwater moray eels do not exist. It's just that they don't live long in freshwater. Maybe a year. Echidna rhodochilus is called the freshwater moray eel because they are sometimes found in freshwater but they normally live in brackish or salt water. In the correct conditions they will live for 20 to 30 years. What you have wildly wrong is that they do not live in Tanganyika so why are to you keep the poor thing in a Tanganyika tank? You are slowly killing it. They come from the coastal brackish regions of East Asia. If you want to keep it alive put it in a suitable tank with brackish water and some large rocks. Feed it on live scrimps or small live crabs. They eat two or three large meals a week. They don't like dead food but you may be able to hand feed it on very fresh fish once you have got it into a reasonable condition. Be careful, they can bite hard. Steve Could it be that Chip actually has a Mastacemblus (spelling?) species? Knowing the fanciful names that many species are marketed under, that would be my guess ... John |
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if that means genital warts, then you are probabaly correct
"John" wrote in message ... On Tue, 29 Jun 2004 00:26:44 +0100, wrote: On 28 Jun 2004 15:47:29 -0700, (Chip) wrote: other news: my freshwater mooray eel still not eating... thanks to all who gave me suggestions and although many of you just said that there are no such thing as freshwater moray eels, and the internet knowledge base also does not offer too much help, the fact is I have one 16 inch, in my tanganykan tank since january. Nobody is saying that freshwater moray eels do not exist. It's just that they don't live long in freshwater. Maybe a year. Echidna rhodochilus is called the freshwater moray eel because they are sometimes found in freshwater but they normally live in brackish or salt water. In the correct conditions they will live for 20 to 30 years. What you have wildly wrong is that they do not live in Tanganyika so why are to you keep the poor thing in a Tanganyika tank? You are slowly killing it. They come from the coastal brackish regions of East Asia. If you want to keep it alive put it in a suitable tank with brackish water and some large rocks. Feed it on live scrimps or small live crabs. They eat two or three large meals a week. They don't like dead food but you may be able to hand feed it on very fresh fish once you have got it into a reasonable condition. Be careful, they can bite hard. Steve Could it be that Chip actually has a Mastacemblus (spelling?) species? Knowing the fanciful names that many species are marketed under, that would be my guess ... John |
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