Deep Blue Sea;4518338; said:these are just fish and not humans
they are still a living creature and should be provided with the best possible care.
Deep Blue Sea;4518338; said:these are just fish and not humans
I see you have a jardini, that too is a living creature and if you want it to be provided with the best possible care go buy it a 3,000 gallon tank just for it.aidenb;4540551; said:they are still a living creature and should be provided with the best possible care.
Is that store The Fish Place in Lockport? Is this the tank?Industrial;4540844; said:We got two at work in a 16'x4'x5' tank and the largest of the two is no more than 30'. The red tail cats are also a lot less active than young RTCs and rarely use more than 8' of the tank at once from what I see. During feeding they may use 12' of the length, but are very slow. I would say that 480 gallons would be enough (the equivalent of four 120s) to comfortably house a RTC for life.
Deep Blue Sea;4540831; said:I see you have a jardini, that too is a living creature and if you want it to be provided with the best possible care go buy it a 3,000 gallon tank just for it.
Honestly these are just fish, yes you should take good care of them but you don't have to make your tank a Four Seasons Resort. Theres a difference between taking good care of your fish and treating them like kings.
Deep Blue Sea;4540831; said:Honestly these are just fish, .
This is exactly what I was saying, they probably wont get to be 5' monsters but 3' seems like a better common size in aquariums and a 450g-500g would be fine to hold almost any 3' fishaidenb;4540989; said:No they don't require insane tanks, but they do require adequate space to be comfortable, and even record jardinis are still substantially smaller, in length and girth, than a red tail cat. I agree, most red tails will never grow as big as people say but you should still expect 3'-3.5' and have a suitably sized aquarium to house a fish that size