The one I had took FD bloodworms the 1st day then took FD krill and veggie and shrimp pellets. They are jumpers so you need a full lid, thats how mine commited suicide.
Wow! And I though my two seven inchers were big.Noto;4116094; said:creek chubs nearly a foot.
Thanks for the info. Im looking into tankmates and what size of tank they would be comfortable in (I was told a 39 gallon would be ok for Green sunfish once after our ice storm and I lost all my convicts......wrong answer they outgrew it in 2 years) before I make a trip and collect any.Noto;4116094;4116094 said:Chiller is definitely not necessary for creek chubs. They thrive in intermittent streams where they often are isolated in small, thermically unstable pools for weeks or months.
Redspot chubs (Nocomis asper) are rather different from creek chubs. I haven't kept redspots but have a group of the closely related river chubs. Nocomis chubs are more accustomed to large streams (read: stable temperatures) and are less predatory than Semotilus chubs. A chiller should still not be necessary if your home temperatures don't get too terribly hot; a fan may be useful during heat waves.
Nocomis can be kept with much smaller fish, while Semotilus should only have tankmates near their own size. Otherwise Nocomis have just as broad an appetite as creek chubs and usually take to frozen foods, flakes, and pellets without much persuasion.
Just remember that these chubs get big (for minnows). Redspots can reach 9", creek chubs nearly a foot.
TStephens;4116761; said:The one I had took FD bloodworms the 1st day then took FD krill and veggie and shrimp pellets. They are jumpers so you need a full lid, thats how mine commited suicide.
Thanks.....I think Im going to end up making a Central Longear Sunfish/ Redspot Chub tank with some common shiners thrown in for good measure.Noto;4117633;4117633 said:I would go with an 18" X 36" footprint (40 breeder or 65) at least. Of course bigger is better, and these are active fish that will use the whole tank.
My river chubs are in a large tank with other big minnows (stonerollers, striped shiners, golden shiners), a northern studfish, various sunfish, and rock bass. I don't currently have any creek chub but they would also do fine in that tank.
Tankmates to avoid are anything small enough to fit in the chub's mouth, and anything that is shy or passive when it comes to feeding time. For creek chub, tankmates should be close to their own size. Redspots can probably be kept with most other minnows, even little guys like Chrosomus and Notropis species.
Chub are very aggressive feeders, and fish like pickerel, mudminnows, darters, and madtoms are likely to go hungry in a tank with chub unless you go to special lengths to deliver food to these fish.