I Bring Hope To Who Do Not Have The Room To Keep Big Aros! 4 inch Max Aros!!!

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Gothyc_samurai

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Nov 24, 2005
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Freshwater butterflyfish

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia

Phylum: Chordata

Class: Actinopterygii

Order: Osteoglossiformes

Family: Pantodontidae

Genus: Pantodon
Peters, 1877
Species: P. buchholzi


Binomial name
Pantodon buchholzi
Peters, 1877
The freshwater butterflyfish or African butterflyfish, Pantodon buchholzi, is the only species in the family Pantodontidae within the Order Osteoglossiformes. It is not closely related to saltwater butterflyfishes.

Contents [hide]
1 Habits
2 Location
3 In the aquarium
4 References
5 See also



Habits
The freshwater butterflyfish is a specialized surface hunter. It is able to breathe air due to its well-vascularized swim bladder. Its eyes are constantly trained to the surface and its upturned mouth is specifically adapted to capture small prey along the water's surface. If enough speed is built up in the water, a butterflyfish can jump and glide a small distance above the surface to avoid predation. It also wiggles its pectoral fins as it glides, with the help of specialized, enlarged pectoral muscles, the ability which earned the fish its common name. [1] The fish feeds primarily on small insects and smaller fishes.


Location
Freshwater butterflyfish are found in the slightly acidic standing bodies of water in West Africa. They require a year round temperature of 73-86°F. Butterflyfish are found in slow to no current areas with high amounts of surface foliage for cover. They are commonly seen in Lake Chad, the Congo Basin, throughout Lower Niger, Cameroon, Ogooue, and Upper Zambezi. They have also been seen in the Niger Delta, Lower Ogun, and in the Lower Cross River.


In the aquarium
Freshwater butterflyfish can be kept as pets in an aquarium of at least 30 gallons. A tightly closed top on the tank is required because of their jumping habits. They also prefer a tank with live plants, especially ones that float near the surface, providing hiding places to reduce stress. Other required conditions are a temperature of 75° to 85°F, a pH of 6.9-7.1, and a KH of 1-10. They are more likely to spawn under such conditions, producing a mass of large floating eggs at the surface. Eggs hatch in approximately seven days. Because they are carnivorous, the freshwater butterflyfish must be fed a diet of moths, insects, small fish, brine shrimp, bloodworms, or other types of meaty foods. Occasionally they will eat flake food, but cannot subsist on it. In aquaria, freshwater butterflyfish can grow to 4 inches. The butterflyfish should not be kept with fin-eating or aggressive fishes.

hope this helps! :D

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No offense if you have these, but everybody I've talked to that has had these says they're the most boring aquarium fish they've ever owned. They float in one place and that's it. That's all they do.
They look cool, but they're definitely not for me.
 
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I have one of these, and have owned one it the past. True, they don't swim around much, but put some feeders in and WooHOO! They are really fun to watch hunt, and if you can train it to hand feed with some bloodworms then it's fun to play tug of war with them. They shake like dogs, lol.:D
 
Gothyc_samurai;1555478; said:
Freshwater butterflyfish

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia

Phylum: Chordata

Class: Actinopterygii

Order: Osteoglossiformes

Family: Pantodontidae

Genus: Pantodon
Peters, 1877
Species: P. buchholzi


Binomial name
Pantodon buchholzi
Peters, 1877
The freshwater butterflyfish or African butterflyfish, Pantodon buchholzi, is the only species in the family Pantodontidae within the Order Osteoglossiformes. It is not closely related to saltwater butterflyfishes.

No offense, I personally don't see how this is a substitute for aros. Yes they are both in osteoglossiformes, but these guys don't fall into the same family of osteoglossidae or any of the sub family genera.

I just think it is a little misleading for you to say "4 inch max aros", when these aren't really aros.
 
amazing how they do have the arow face.. too funny!
 
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