anyone who knows alot about snow flake morrays look at this

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So um another fact ive heard about them is that fw snowflakes and marine sf eels r them same but fw morrays r just juveniles of the marines and swell idk but i suppose ill give it a try as long as u guys think that it wont die the second i put it in after acclimation.

i have no idea what you just said
 
Sry multi tasking never ends well um wut im asking is if i do attempt this would it die once it would hit the water or do u think it would live long enough to work out kinks.
 
Seeing as you are posting about a freshwater snowflake I'll assume you are talking about the G. tile, that is a great fish. Do they look like this:

http://www.zipcodezoo.com/hp250/Gymnothorax_tile_1.jpg

If so then its a G. tile. I kept mine in fresh for over 3 years. They can manage fresh but you really need prisitine water and a great diet to keep them. At any rate they do great in brackish. Don't know much about them in salt since no one really posts about them in marine settings.
 
No they actually look like classic snow flakes but im horribly confused so ill just spit it out can the normal snow flakes live in a brack tank with an sg between .010 and .014.
 
So you mean : Echidna nebulosa

Sorry but there are 3 or more completely different species called snowflake eel. You naming it as a freshwater snowflake made it sound like one of the many brackish snowflakes. I personally wouldn't try to keep a true blue marine eel in brackish though(assuming that is what you are talking about). Post some pics... Then we can give you a definitive recommendation.
 
images
looks about like that except alot smaller
 
No they actually look like classic snow flakes but im horribly confused so ill just spit it out can the normal snow flakes live in a brack tank with an sg between .010 and .014.

Thats echidna nebulosa, a fully saltwater fish. (gymnothorax tile is brackish species). E. ebulosa is not a brackish fish. They may be able to tolerate it, but that is not ideal living conditions for them.
 
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