john_lord_b3 can help you
wow, they look great. g. Tile is more common in the stores around me so I prefer to buy that one.All three of my E. Rhodochiluses are most happy when the water salinity is 1.006 sg. They became active, outgoing and eat like pigs!
wow, they look great. g. Tile is more common in the stores around me so I prefer to buy that one.
Can u tell me the price u bought the pink lips for?
I will use the waterdrip methode to move it into my tank. Do u have any problems with brackish water? And how many morays would u recommend in a 300liter tank?
Also do you know any cool fish that can be kept with them? Sry for so many questions![]()

thank u for the information.. wow can't believe how cheap they are. The ones here are sometimes around 170 euro's. I will keep it in heavy brackish. Its recommended for the fish and I want them to live long and happy. Do u have any idea what to put with them In a tank?I live in Indonesia, that's the country where all freshwater/brackish morays came from, including the E. Rhodochilus, G. Polyuranodon, G. Tile, and even odd monsters like Strophidon Sathete and G. Meleagris, as well as cute little Uropterygius Micropterus can be found in our rivers. So you can imagine that prices of such eels are very low here when compared to other countries.
I bought all of my E. Rhodochiluses for under 7 USD each. The Uropterygius is even lower in price. G. Tile, I never bought any but it's about the same price point, maybe higher by one or two dollars. We are talking about younger speciments that are about 30 to 40 centimeters in length. Larger speciments certainly cost more.
The G. Polyuranodon however is on a league of its own, they are 2 to 3 times more expensive than other FW/BW morays, because they are the most beautiful & most sought after by collectors. Large speciments over 1 meters long could cost 70-80 USD.
More about G. Tile. Most people will tell you that these will die in FW and will require 100% seawater as the grow older. This might be true. On the other hand, everybody around here (in this country) that I know of, keep G. Tile in FW to pure brackish (max 1.010 sg). They doesn't keep G. Tiles in seawater. So, brackish is the safest bet.
Anyway, these two gentlemen seems to have been successful in keeping G. Tile in _freshwater_:
http://www.aquaticcommunity.com/predatory/freshwatermoray.php
http://www.aquahobby.com/gallery/others/e_Gymnothorax_tile.php
But even though it is possible and they have been successful, I still does not recommend to keep G. Tile on FW. Always better to put them in brackish (at least 1.006-1.008 sg). However, I can say with some confidence that you don't really need to put G. Tile on SW.
This is a G. Tile that is being kept in FW here in Indonesia for quite awhile, with no ill-effect, until it was sold. As you can see, it gets along with a large cichlid, but I personally won't recommend. If you keep G. Tile in brackish, I think you need a bracksh-tolerant fish that is bigger than the eel but who won't see the eel as food. Also, G. Tile is rather fierce when it gets bigger, so if you plan to keep several G. Tiles, I recommend to put them in the aquarium at the same time (so they have time to adapt with each other), and that they must be around the same size.
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thank u for the information.. wow can't believe how cheap they are. The ones here are sometimes around 170 euro's. I will keep it in heavy brackish. Its recommended for the fish and I want them to live long and happy. Do u have any idea what to put with them In a tank?
And I read some sites but almost every site says something different about the length. Some say 90cm other 60cm other 40cm other 1,2m max. What is the max length they reach by you in the aquarium?
). Try to fluctuate between 1.005 (half brackish) and 1.010 (pure brackish), this is to simulate their actual environment (the rivermouth of S.E. Asia, where freshwater and saltwater collide).
I read that they need between 1,015 and 1,020
It would be a great help if u can ask them what they keep with them.I searched quite a lot on fish to keep with them. Most of them kept molleys/argus/mono's or tetraodons .
But my tank is to small for mono's and argus. And tetraodon is not really a good recommendation as u also said before.
1.020sg is already full-strength seawater, if you go for this salinity, then your filters will not be brackish anymore but will adapt to seawater-strength. I guess is that people who wrote 1.015 to 1.020 sg are assuming that you want to eventually keep the eel in seawater. Pure brackish is 1.010sg, so if you want high brackish then the range should be between 1.010 to 1.015 sg.
I will get back to you when I have more info about compatible fishes.
Actually, A friend just told me that dragon gobies could be kept successfully with various types of brackish and marine morays. However, as you might have guessed, the dragon goby is a brackish fish that is rare, and probably rather expensive. Plus it also has certain requirements of its own, so I can't say it's recommended.
I also heard that ropefishes (erpetoichtyes, a relative to bichirs) could tolerate low-end brackish water & won't bother your eels nor hogged all their food, but since you want to keep your eels in high-end brackish, maybe it's not so good idea to get a ropefish.
I'll search around to find another possibilities, so don't lose hope yet![]()