I wont do the ecosystem, rather thinking of a few predators like datnoids and kelberi with school of geophagus surinamensis and bandit eartheater
I wont do the ecosystem, rather thinking of a few predators like datnoids and kelberi with school of geophagus surinamensis and bandit eartheater
Silver arowanas will get too big for long term housing in a 300 gallonYeah, you could do something like that. Maybe you could stick with a regional tank? Like silver arowanas, peacock bass, and other cichlids. Or datnoids, clown knifes, giant gouramis etc.
Silver arowanas will get too big for long term housing in a 300 gallon
thanks for the ideas
Silver arowanas will get too big for long term housing in a 300 gallon
thanks for the ideas
Jardinis cannot be kept with other fish once matureIf you are worried about keeping a Silver Arowana in a 300-gallon, you could go for a Jardini. Jardini Arowanas grow to about 2 feet long in captivity, so you may be able to have two. I don't know of any Australian fish appropriate to put with a Jardini. I'm thinking Rainbow fish, but long term, they will be expensive snacks.
my oscar and peacock bass will be expensive snacksJardinis cannot be kept with other fish once maturethey are killing machines
my oscar and peacock bass will be expensive snacks![]()
jardini wont necessarily eat them, just kill themI highly doubt it if both fish are sizable. Unless the Jardini is full grown and the other fish are babies, then a Jardini couldn't hurt a larger Oscar or Peacock bass.