Impulse Buy...

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Friendly Fisher

Feeder Fish
Sep 30, 2006
2
0
0
canada
Hi I'm new on here and I have a question... I was just in the LFS and they had 2 Fire Eels and I had to have one... He is about 5-6inches. He is in a 90g with sand substrate with Angels, Keyholes, Zebra Danios, and Mollies which might get ate... Anyone have any general advice for me???
Thanks
 
Welcome to MFK!!!

Fire Eel
SYN: Macrognathus erythrotaenia
PD: An elongated fish with a pointed snout. The body is dark brown, while the belly is light gray-brown. The pattern varies from fish to fish. Usually several bright red lateral stripes and spots mark the body. These vary in intensity depending on the age and condition of the specimen. Usually the markings are yellow with juvenile fish, changing to red in larger ones. Often the anal, pectoral, and dorsal fins have a red edging.
SIZE: To 40" (100 cm) in nature, rarely exceeds 20? (51 cm) in captivity.
SS: None
HAB: Southeast Asia; moving water with a soft riverbed in Borneo, India, Malaysia, Myanmar (Burma), Sri Lanka, Sumatra, Thailand.
S: bottom
TANK: A tank measuring 36? (91 cm) with a capacity of 35 gallons (132 L) is sufficient for fish to 6" (15 cm). Larger fish require larger tanks. For tank set-up, follow suggestions for M. circumcinctus .
WATER: pH 6-7.5 (7.0), 6-20 dH (10), 75-81°F (24-27°C), a little salt is welcomed
SB: Do not keep with small fish, they will be eaten. A good candidate for a community tank with medium to large fish such as cichlids. Will often not get along with others of the same species.
FOOD: Live; Tubifex, fish, Brine Shrimp, mosquito larvae, bloodworms, Ghostshrimp, etc.
SEX: Only distinguishable when mature-females plumper.
B: Spawning with mature fish (over 20") has been reported. Use a large tank with a pH around 7.0, a water hardness from 10-15 dH, and a temperature from 81-84°F (27-29°C). They are plant spawners that lay 800-1200 eggs in floating plants. The eggs are clear and measure 1/20" (12-13 mm) in diameter. Feed fry small live foods, but be sure not to overfeed them, for the fry will over-consume the food and likely expire. The young grow very quickly.
BP: 9. Breeding is rare and extremely difficult.
R: Will burrow in substrate, but not as often as other Mastacembelus species. Is more prone to-parasites, injuries, and shock. The Fire Eel can become affectionate towards its owner, often taking foods from the hand.
DC: 6. This nocturnal species requires a diet including live foods.
 
And another warm welcome to MFK. There is no such thing as an impulse by in the aquarium hobby. You need to be prepaired to jump on rare fish that you happen upon. If you don't, the next customer will. Oddballs just do not last long at the fish store. If your gut instinct says buy, listen to it. You can always ask questions later. If you ask questions first, your prize will not be waiting for you when you go back.
 
****MFK URGES ALL MEMBERS TO SEARCH OUT, AT LEAST, BASIC SPECIES INFORMATION BEFORE OBTAINING A NEW FISH****

No matter how badly you may want it, it won't do either of you any good if your prized new find goes belly up as soon as you tank it.
 
I'n not worrying about him dying he will be fine I was just wondering if anyone had any care tips. There was 2 of them in the store and they were $16.99 CDN. Is that a good price for a 5-6" fire eel?
Thanks
 
Friendly Fisher;527551; said:
There was 2 of them in the store and they were $16.99 CDN. Is that a good price for a 5-6" fire eel?
Thanks

That's a pretty good price, my LFS has fire eels about the same size for $20 US (about $22 Canadian)
 
Friendly Fisher;527551; said:
I'n not worrying about him dying he will be fine I was just wondering if anyone had any care tips. There was 2 of them in the store and they were $16.99 CDN. Is that a good price for a 5-6" fire eel?
Thanks

I never said yours was at risk of dying. I posted the note to counter chomper's comment on impulse buying. It's always preferable to ready the tank for the fish and not force the fish to 'adapt' to your tank.
 
Oddball;527545; said:
****MFK URGES ALL MEMBERS TO SEARCH OUT, AT LEAST, BASIC SPECIES INFORMATION BEFORE OBTAINING A NEW FISH****

No matter how badly you may want it, it won't do either of you any good if your prized new find goes belly up as soon as you tank it.

:iagree:
My last impulse buy was an Albino Bichir. Don't have any experience with these guys, but I've been interested in them and did some research before. I bought him on impulse, but at least I know a bit about it. If you're not sure about it, ask the employee (he/she might actually know something about fish) or ask if they can hold on for it for a week and do some internet surfing.
 
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