arowana with two heads

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
I don't see a problem with letting it live. It clearly thrived enough to grow to an adult and it doesn't know its different than all the other fish. LOL
Same as Siamese twins in humans.

But I do have a huge problem with the fact they increased the price because its mutated.


what it lived to a adult i dont think so

please post a pic of any 2 headed aro at 2-3ft

the bottom aro in that video is just a parasite

if it was doing well both top and bottom aro would be the same size
 
what it lived to a adult i dont think so

please post a pic of any 2 headed aro at 2-3ft

the bottom aro in that video is just a parasite

if it was doing well both top and bottom aro would be the same size

+1

When I first watched the video I was shocked that the parasitic twin showed any signs of brain activity at all.

I found that to be mildly disturbing to be honest.
 
It looks like the bottom one is going to snap in half. If one dies will the other die to?
 
It looks like the bottom one is going to snap in half. If one dies will the other die to?

The bottom fish needs the top fish, the top fish would likely survive without the bottom fish.

In instances like this, normally the parasitic twin doesn't contain any organs that are essential to the survival of the host twin. In some rare instances they do contain something vital, but that is unusual. Odds are good that with a bottle of clove oil and a sharp scalpel you could separate the parasite with no harm being done to the host.

If the parasite died, it would cause the host to die a short while later through infections and septicemia.
 
MonsterFishKeepers.com