I’ve heard Bryson can be very aggressive thoBrycon cephalus
Red-tailed Brycon
Are basically mini Dorado, get 8"
I’ve heard Bryson can be very aggressive thoBrycon cephalus
Red-tailed Brycon
Are basically mini Dorado, get 8"
on yeah misread what you said before, will send him a message about themRob has Hoga in stock not from that order pal. Can get em anytime I believe.
Midas will be food interactive at small sizes but won't be aggressive until 10+" ime.
If you want that attitude and more buy a fh.
Good Fh are like that from 4";-)
Sorry buddy but you’re thinking MBU puffer at that size... largest fahaka i’ve ever heard of was i think 18 or 19” on here...Several of our members have /had fahakas in the 30-36 range
Just make sure the divider is strong and you decide which you want to keep within around 6-8months...I’ve decided to divide the tank in two and get a baby Midas and a baby fahaka and see which one I like better
That fahaka was a monster, thanks for sharing and Id worry more about putting my hand in the tank with a fahaka as they have the ablility to do serious damageThis is the biggest Fahaka I've seen.
There are a few videos of people petting Fahakas and Midases on YouTube. I was able to pet my both of my Fahakas, but my MiDevil was one of the meanest fish I've kept. Once he reached the 12-13" mark, I couldn't put my hand in the tank without being attacked. Trust me, you don't want a fish that bites. That being said, I've never seen a pet fish like this before.
I agree with asterophysus on this one, my old polleni was intent on killing me everytime i worked on his tank and drew blood multiple times when i didnt pay attention...I was bitten by accident by one of my Fahakas (around a foot at the time) while hand feeding him. It didn't break the skin. No doubt, if he had tried, he would have caused some damage. But the point is, IME Fahakas usually aren't aggressive towards their owners. My MiDevil bit with intent and would draw blood. I had to wear gloves to clean his tank. But as always, I guess it all depends on the individual fish.