What a great looking fish he was. You obviously took good care of him and gave him a good life if he lived double what they say he should have.
The biggest tank it has been in has been (UK) 300 gal so i don't know how big they might get in multi thousand gallon systems.14 yrs is a long time, bummer, sorry that you lost this fish. Just goes to show how large this species can get if one keeps them to full maturity.
The biggest tank it has been in has been (UK) 300 gal so i don't know how big they might get in multi thousand gallon systems.
The biggest tank it has been in has been (UK) 300 gal so i don't know how big they might get in multi thousand gallon systems.
MrsE88 I was thinking of you when I saw this on a local forum. And that's in a 220.
Owner was looking to rehome, and in his ad stated: "I have one XXL Flagtail, at least 14" long, and thick, healthy fish, lives on NLS food. She will need to have a large home, currently lives in a 220 gal tank, but should be larger."
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I think a lot of bigger aquarium fish need revisiting with regard to size (and captive longevity), in particular i think Total length should be used in most cases ( i understand with things like Acanthicus this gets skewed if you count the tail extensions) as on the majority of fish this could add another 25-33% to the size you need to consider for tank size. eg a standard length 15 inch tinfoil is actually a 20 inch animal in your tank.Man thats 50 ****ing cm. Dont think it will get much bigger then that. Thats frickin huge.