$4.00 for an pima!!! Wow, lost of people in asia own makeship ponds (holes in the ground get filled with water), although some also get those exquisite ones. Does anyone know if a 72"x30"x30" enough space for one Pima?wazza said:big rules, so would have to be Aparima gigas,commonly known in thailand as amazon snake head,to( all you snake head lovers they actually sell here live, at the food market for $2-3kg)
Aro's are the greatest,asians no1,Jardini no2, then silvers no3.
At chatuchuk in bankok,(I live in Phuket Thailand) silvers are available at 3+in for$4 ,here in phuket about $15, Jardini I can get here 3+in $25, and asian you can spend $thousands depending on size and colour ,aparimas are readily available at 2ins up starting at $4and going up according to size
guppy said:Sterlets are fairly common and are farm raised, fairly cheap in England. they actually get pretty hardy when larger but are delicate when small. The reason(s) they don't do well in most tanks is that they need low temps and lots of O2, much like trout. 60-70 degrees F. would be great with extra aeration. They also get out competed for food when small. I you can keep rainbow trout you can probably keep sturgeon. I checked out a couple sites not that long ago that had sterlets, stellate sturgeon, and siberian sturgeon for sale in the U.K.
guppy said:Sterlets are fairly common and are farm raised, fairly cheap in England. they actually get pretty hardy when larger but are delicate when small. The reason(s) they don't do well in most tanks is that they need low temps and lots of O2, much like trout. 60-70 degrees F. would be great with extra aeration. They also get out competed for food when small. I you can keep rainbow trout you can probably keep sturgeon. I checked out a couple sites not that long ago that had sterlets, stellate sturgeon, and siberian sturgeon for sale in the U.K.