L LawOne Feeder Fish MFK Member May 13, 2008 93 1 0 hawaii Jan 14, 2009 #1 Didn't believe it till I saw it http://arowana-care.com/aroblog/arowana-news-others/65
S sodenoshirayuki Feeder Fish MFK Member Aug 24, 2008 1,205 0 0 Toronto Jan 14, 2009 #2 very old, but either way, why wouldn't it be possible?
S spring007 Feeder Fish MFK Member Feb 3, 2006 486 0 0 Where there is sunshine Jan 15, 2009 #7 that is amazing!
A aro-discus Gambusia MFK Member May 16, 2007 159 1 16 changing water Jan 15, 2009 #8 thanks for finding that old tank breeding video from japan. Guess they CAN breed outside their native habitat. Man youtube is great, irrefutable proof is simply a click away.
thanks for finding that old tank breeding video from japan. Guess they CAN breed outside their native habitat. Man youtube is great, irrefutable proof is simply a click away.
V vicdeedee Feeder Fish MFK Member Jan 2, 2009 207 1 0 toronto Jan 15, 2009 #9 i wish my silvers did would do that, how do you think those 2 survived together? or do you think that seperated them into a tank from a pond after a pair was matched?
i wish my silvers did would do that, how do you think those 2 survived together? or do you think that seperated them into a tank from a pond after a pair was matched?
P pressure_cooker Feeder Fish MFK Member Sep 1, 2008 275 3 0 asia Jan 15, 2009 #10 aro-discus;2649375; said: thanks for finding that old tank breeding video from japan. Guess they CAN breed outside their native habitat. Man youtube is great, irrefutable proof is simply a click away. Click to expand... no one said it cant be bred, it would take you many many years to make a pair and another many many years and 30% success rate of breeding these fish.
aro-discus;2649375; said: thanks for finding that old tank breeding video from japan. Guess they CAN breed outside their native habitat. Man youtube is great, irrefutable proof is simply a click away. Click to expand... no one said it cant be bred, it would take you many many years to make a pair and another many many years and 30% success rate of breeding these fish.