Silver Datnoids longterm in freshwater?

thebiggerthebetter

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Vancouver_98683 Vancouver_98683 should be your best adviser.

You appear to have read my thread "What kind is my lonely datnoid?". I only ever had one silver dat. While it grew to 13" I failed to keep it longer than 4-5 years of age in freshwater. Every bit of knowledge I could offer you that I gained from my experience would have been deposited in my thread already.

I don't do plants, so nothing can say there.

I believe the age at which the fish is collected from the wild brackish water in south and southeast Asia has no bearing on how it will or will not adjust to the pure freshwater life and I also believe it won't live long in freshwater.

If you are an idealist and perfectionist or if you have an extremist-minded animal lover living with you under the same roof, I'd say don't get it... or rather don't ever get any pets, haha.... If you are an experimentalist and a learner, I don't see why not get it. Especially if you make up a thread on it and update it regularly with timeworthy info and visuals, both good and bad, and teach us all and many more to come...
 

Hendre

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Low end brackish isn't too difficult to do, and less picky than full saltwater. It's worth a shot!
 
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Rayfishowner

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Vancouver_98683 Vancouver_98683 should be your best adviser.

You appear to have read my thread "What kind is my lonely datnoid?". I only ever had one silver dat. While it grew to 13" I failed to keep it longer than 4-5 years of age in freshwater. Every bit of knowledge I could offer you that I gained from my experience would have been deposited in my thread already.

I don't do plants, so nothing can say there.

I believe the age at which the fish is collected from the wild brackish water in south and southeast Asia has no bearing on how it will or will not adjust to the pure freshwater life and I also believe it won't live long in freshwater.

If you are an idealist and perfectionist or if you have an extremist-minded animal lover living with you under the same roof, I'd say don't get it... or rather don't ever get any pets, haha.... If you are an experimentalist and a learner, I don't see why not get it. Especially if you make up a thread on it and update it regularly with timeworthy info and visuals, both good and bad, and teach us all and many more to come...
Thanks for your incite! Next time I go to my lfs I will consider getting it and hopefully offer something meaningful about this species in the future!
 

Rayfishowner

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Low end brackish isn't too difficult to do, and less picky than full saltwater. It's worth a shot!
Lol def! My only concern is that I want to keep the plants alive so maybe I’ll get another large tank and keep a brackish system!
 

thebiggerthebetter

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As guys said above, freshwater plants are incompatible with brackish and salt water. That much I've heard enough to say that I know it. Don't ask me any details.

Some of my friends who keep both plants and fish say plants are harder...
 
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kno4te

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Lol def! My only concern is that I want to keep the plants alive so maybe I’ll get another large tank and keep a brackish system!
Some plants can be converted to brackish water, like valisneria. It takes time to convert.
 

Vancouver_98683

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It’s a belief Silver Datnoids thrive best with Salinity in the tank. Long term in a Captivity. They inhabit the some of the same body of water with brackish archer species when younger. You’ll see them on YouTube and caught with Indos too in most of the Indonesian islands.

I’ve personally grown a few out to 11” with very little salinity in the past. Have one now at about 11.5” and I maintain a 1.25 cup per gallon - water softener. 40lb bag $6. Natural sodium Chloride, NaCl
 

Blakewater

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You should read into some of the stuff Wes (Rare Fish) has posted about brackish fish. They seem well thought out and explains that it isnt so much the salt as the minerals and elements commonly found in brackish water that make certain fish require it. Might help a bit
 
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