You're dumb, Eddie. That's why you fail to see the connection.
. My point was that someone DID get the joke.

Either the lfs is lying or they have no idea the piranha's actual age. But yes it's stunted.Real quick, I'm no priahna guy but the LFS near me has a lone seemingly pure RBP in a 30 gallon display. It says its 20 years old but only 6 inches long? Is that thing stunted? haha
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Real quick, I'm no priahna guy but the LFS near me has a lone seemingly pure RBP in a 30 gallon display. It says its 20 years old but only 6 inches long? Is that thing stunted? haha
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You're dumb, Eddie. That's why you fail to see the connection.. My point was that someone DID get the joke.
As mn said, its stunted. A RBP would reach 6 inches after 8-11 months. Is it thick at least? I believe some of these pet stores and aquariums have display tanks they've had for a long time but you won't find too many in the home aquaria with 1 owner
Oh its on Jersey trollo! Prepare for a fantasy football beat down
In from NY guyyyyyy and yes you will beat me haha
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As mn said, its stunted. A RBP would reach 6 inches after 8-11 months. Is it thick at least? I believe some of these pet stores and aquariums have display tanks they've had for a long time but you won't find too many in the home aquaria with 1 owner
Oh its on Jersey trollo! Prepare for a fantasy football beat down
HOW TO TELL AGE OF YOUR PIRANHA
All fish scales, however, are not alike. There are four major groups, one of which is comprised of cycloid and ctenoid scales. The ctenoid variety have a comb-like, spiny posterior edge, their name developing from the Greek word cteno, meaning comb. Conversely, cycloid scales have a smooth posterior edge as their name from the Greek cyclo, meaning circle, implies. Both types of scales, however, consist of two main regions; a rigid surface layer chiefly composed of calcium-based salts, and a deeper fibrous layer consisting mainly of collagen. Fish scales were once used to estimate the age of a fish. However, this method is now regarded as unreliable. Instead when the fish die, the bones in their heads called otoliths (oto’ meaning ear and lith’ meaning stone) are removed. These bones help the fish to keeping its balance in the water. When an otolith is removed from a fish, sectioned into thin slices and viewed through a microscope, it reveals a pattern of light and dark concentric rings. The only other way you can determine a piranhas age is to hatch it from an egg and record its growth.