Huh, but you still have not come up with any new reasons that have not been in countless other threads. You just happen to think your right. Whats my point? Your wrong.
IMO that is great evidence that environmental factors have nothing to do with it. I subscribe to the theory that is a genetic problem, caused by indescriminate breeding on a mass scale. If you look at the other species of aro, the only other one that seems to get DE more frequently than in freak occurrances is the asian aro, which is also heavily farm bred (but with a bit more emphasis on quality than silvers).
When I was in Singapore I saw many large silvers in big ponds, some had DE, some didn't.
I agree with T1KARMANN; if you don't like DE spend the extra coin and get a black!!
In the wild silver aros would live in muddy pools no the clear water we provide in tanks
It's something in a tank environment that silvers don't take we'll to but other aros seam to be able to deal with
I've seen plenty of footage of silvers cruising through fairly clear water in the flooded forest, and I've seen many silvers in large muddy ponds in Singapore with DE.
I'm not convinced about the "looking down for food" theory, as quite often it seems to happen in one eye only (or far worse in one eye).
Huh, but you still have not come up with any new reasons that have not been in countless other threads. You just happen to think your right. Whats my point? Your wrong.
Cheak it out man
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S_Y15Zoez7A&feature=youtube_gdata_player
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