brackish species??

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my silver dat is doing fine at 1.010 but he just doesnt like nonlive food but anyway were would someone be able to find brackish flounders like the blind tounge sole and is the climbing perch brackish?
 
cudamaster13;4125139; said:
my silver dat is doing fine at 1.010 but he just doesnt like nonlive food but anyway were would someone be able to find brackish flounders like the blind tounge sole and is the climbing perch brackish?

i think the climbing perch might be brackish im not sure tell me if im wrong i will research more but does anyone here have any brackish snappers?
 
Knight gobys, purple spotted goby/gudgeon, dragon gobys and pike livebearers (belonesox belizanus) are all brackish species.

Most brackish fish tend to be a little on the mean side, but you could also do a brackish community with wrestling halfbeaks, guppys, indian glassfish etc.

F8 and GSP pufferfish are brackish, but are highly aggressive and best kept with their own kind since the only safe fish will eat them.
 
Belonesox are freshwater, but like most livebearers are tough and will probably survive in brackish for quite a while. Anableps, sailfin mollies (Poecilia latipinnis, P. velifer, and their hybrids), and Gambusia rhizophora are true brackish/euryhaline livebearers. There are usually some brackish killies available in the North American native section on Aquabid; Adinia xenica, Cyprinodon variegatus, Fundulus grandis, F. heteroclitus, F. majalis, and F. similis are all examples. Many flounders and flatfishes are euryahline, including the "freshwater" hogchoker. Most pipefish are racksih or euryhaline. Pinfish (Lagodon rhomboides) are a common fish of high-end brackish waters along the US east coast; I'm not sure why they aren't kept in aquaria, as they are an attractive, moderate-sized fish.
 
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