Could try a lake Nicaraguan biotope with dovii and juvenile bullsharks
LOL! I do live on a pretty big lot on the northern gulf coast. I could excavate about .5 acres and collect my own sharks, or I could slip the stock into a nearby private pond. I don't think the neighbors would mind.Could try a lake Nicaraguan biotope with dovii and juvenile bullsharks
how many gallons will the plywood tank be???I thought about possibly red hooks. I can get them locally and who doesn't like a nice group of SD. They don't really fit the CA biotype, but I could call it a south Florida biotype.
Thanks for the suggestions. Most of them sound very cool to me, but are a little larger and more aggressive than what I had in mind. If this build works out, I may try a second larger one and you got some good candidates for it there.
LMFAOOOO!!!!!! You ididiot hahahaCould try a lake Nicaraguan biotope with dovii and juvenile bullsharks
Hey Frank, If the current project goes well I may just do a second 470g. If I get really ambitious I may try and do something in the 1000g range, maybe 12'x5'x30". I would have to build an outbuilding for all my normal garage stuff first.how many gallons will the plywood tank be???
LMFAOOOO!!!!!! You ididiot hahaha
IDK about the other large aggressive male Cichlids I mentioned, but you can certainly try some of the other options in a 470g like big armred catfish - a Giant Raphael would be perfect, and you could do a Mata mata in that as well. I have also found that in a large tank, Channel catfish are so active and high-energy nothing seems to want to bother them for long. I think a Stingray would be a wonderful addition at that size tank also, it's just that ******* barb......I'd worry more about my Dovii than the Stingray.Hey Frank, If the current project goes well I may just do a second 470g. If I get really ambitious I may try and do something in the 1000g range, maybe 12'x5'x30". I would have to build an outbuilding for all my normal garage stuff first.