They were in a 125 gal and they were only 2''s bro. the biggest one eat one and tore the other one up to death almost.Crash607;5108323; said:oh yea, and what size tank were they in?
They were in a 125 gal and they were only 2''s bro. the biggest one eat one and tore the other one up to death almost.Crash607;5108323; said:oh yea, and what size tank were they in?
Thats not in a tank though jelly, thats in the wild in a million gallon set up loljelly;5109854; said:There is an image of a large number of them on the hunt in 'Below Water the Amazon'
Look rookie I dont even have a 20 gallon bro i have nothing less then 4ft. are you kidding mejdm_da510;5111435; said:he prolly put 3 in a 20g tank..now his stupida** wondering why he only has one left...LOL


Your biggest tank is a 75gal bro quit talkingcaribemob;5112005; said:Look rookie I dont even have a 20 gallon bro i have nothing less then 4ft. are you kidding meYour biggest tank is a 75gal bro quit talking
jelly;5111967; said:It's a great book but expensive, don't get me wrong it is worth it. Those DVD's look good. I may well get the 'Wolf Fish' and the 'Freshwater Natural Aquarium' DVD's.
they were two inches bro when I got them I put them in a 125 gal with severums and they were eating my dovii fry and like I said the large one eat one in half and left him there and the other was torn up, Thats the bottom line dude. I just gave my example doesnt mean it won't work for some one elsemynheers_a_pint;5113673; said:Time to wade in with my Size 18s...
Con-specific aggression is evident and can be brutal at times but I genuinely don't understand why three baby Golds would do that- it's the inverse of almost all juvenile predatory Characin behavior (See Armatus, Dorado, ATF, Flagtails etc) that, as babies, shoal specifically for protection, only becoming more aggressive as they mature.
To give further examples, my group have been split up in a couple of orientations (Large with med, Med with baby, Baby alone) with zero notable aggression bar the standard posturing while they got used to each other again. The medium one (10") was with the baby (4") for 3 months and yes there was a bit of chasing every now and again but they were in a tiny grow out (55g). I think it would be safe to say that if the larger wolf wanted to kill the baby, it would have done so. Furthermore, the largest (13") and the med swim together happily in my 340g and have done so for the last 7 months and on and off over 18 months. And, as has been mentioned, two or three is not a shoal so if there was a high volume of aggression I would have expected fatalities in either variation.
So in summary... I can't explain it/don't understand it. Did you mix them right away or did you introduce gradually? Were they feeding at all when you got them? Is there nothing else in the tank that could have caused the issue?
EDIT# Just to point out, that it has been done before;
http://www.monsterfishkeepers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=46044&highlight=gold+wolf
There was also a video on there of a guy who had a comm. of 4 golds, armatus, dorado etc that was kind of my inspiration. I can't find it right now, though.
caribemob;5114696; said:they were two inches bro when I got them I put them in a 125 gal with severums and they were eating my dovii fry and like I said the large one eat one in half and left him there and the other was torn up, Thats the bottom line dude. I just gave my example doesnt mean it won't work for some one else
mynheers_a_pint;5113673; said:Time to wade in with my Size 18s...
Con-specific aggression is evident and can be brutal at times but I genuinely don't understand why three baby Golds would do that- it's the inverse of almost all juvenile predatory Characin behavior (See Armatus, Dorado, ATF, Flagtails etc) that, as babies, shoal specifically for protection, only becoming more aggressive as they mature.
To give further examples, my group have been split up in a couple of orientations (Large with med, Med with baby, Baby alone) with zero notable aggression bar the standard posturing while they got used to each other again. The medium one (10") was with the baby (4") for 3 months and yes there was a bit of chasing every now and again but they were in a tiny grow out (55g). I think it would be safe to say that if the larger wolf wanted to kill the baby, it would have done so. Furthermore, the largest (13") and the med swim together happily in my 340g and have done so for the last 7 months and on and off over 18 months. And, as has been mentioned, two or three is not a shoal so if there was a high volume of aggression I would have expected fatalities in either variation.
So in summary... I can't explain it/don't understand it. Did you mix them right away or did you introduce gradually? Were they feeding at all when you got them? Is there nothing else in the tank that could have caused the issue?
EDIT# Just to point out, that it has been done before;
http://www.monsterfishkeepers.com/forums/showthread.php?t=46044&highlight=gold+wolf
There was also a video on there of a guy who had a comm. of 4 golds, armatus, dorado etc that was kind of my inspiration. I can't find it right now, though.