Bully kelberi pbass moved

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
  • Our website: fish-story.com/
    Donations would be put to an educational and rescue use, and highly appreciated: paypal.me/FishStoryRescue
    If you wished to support the cost of a viewing window for our unfinished 10K gal / 40K liter fish tank, you could do it here: gofund.me/ca7c...
    You can connect with us on Monster Fish Keepers forum (screen name "Thebiggerthebetter") and Planet Catfish forum (screen name "Viktor J").
    Our address: until we open with business hours, ONLY by appointment, do NOT show up without it, please.
    Fish Story Aquarium Attraction & Fish Rescue
    316 Morgan Rd
    Naples, Florida 34114
    USA
    DIY, DIY Aquarium, Public Aquarium, Fish Rescue, SW Florida, Naples, big fish, big aquarium, predatory fish, exotic fish, monster fish, monster fish keeper, fish, aquarium, fish tank, fish keeping, freshwater fish, fish feeding, monster fish feeding, rare fish, monster aquarium, conservation, education, sanctuary, habitat, pet, aquarium fish, pond, fishing, how to
    The following are some of the fish we actually work with, not "fake keywords to drive traffic": South American red tail catfish (SA RTC), Asian RTC (ARTC), tiger shovelnose catfish (TSN), RTC x TSN catfish hybrid, TSN x marbled catfish hybrid, ripsaw or niger catfish, irwini catfish, wyckii catfish, lima shovelnose catfish, sun catfish, marbled catfish, marbled sailfin, any large South American (Pimelodidae, Doradidae, etc.) or Asian (Pangasiidae, Bagridae) catfish, iridescent shark catfish, paroon shark catfish, black ear shark catfish, Phalacronotus, synodontis catfish, mystus catfish, pacu, arowana, giant gourami, eel, spiny eel, blue catfish, channel catfish, flathead catfish, bullhead catfish, white catfish, gar, peacock bass, datnoid, koi, distichodus species, mahseer, probarbus, labeo, black shark, calico shark, bala shark, tinfoil barb, Chinese high fin shark, any large cyprinids and characins, pleco catfish, bichir, knife fish, loach, piranha (legal in Florida, such as, red hook, silver dollar, etc.), barbel, barb, perch, pike, carp, sturgeon, beluga sturgeon, wels catfish, Indo-Pacific tarpon, Aral or Caspian barbel, cichlid, African cichlid, dovii, jaguar cichlid, midas cichlid, vieja cichlid, Texas cichlid, carpintis cichlid, bowfin, redfish, giant Siamese carp, tinfoil, lemon fin barb, small scale mud carp, piraiba catfish, tig catfish, tilapia, Mayan cichlid, leporinus, Prochilodus, flagtail, etc.

Комментарии • 23

  • @dazellis8057
    @dazellis8057 3 месяца назад +7

    Iv watched since you joined the 2 tanks together years ago and dont understannd how you don't have thousands of views in minutes id rather watch a week of your vids over the king of diy or aquarium co op or the higher viewed videos not saying there bad just you feel like more of a hobbyist than a ytuber which is what i want to watch

    • @KuhliLoachTrainer
      @KuhliLoachTrainer 3 месяца назад +2

      I concur! Fish Story is the only aquarium RUclips channel I watch: Viktor really keeps it authentic instead of using edited, scripted footage, images of fish that are not theirs, and clickbaity BS like almost all the other channels.

    • @Fish-Story
      @Fish-Story  3 месяца назад

      Thank you for this, Daz. I've often wondered why peers watch us at all, and your take explains a lot. But down to earth and simple is also boring to most people, that's why we have what we have. And it's okay! If we had a million subs, you and I wouldn't be talking and learning more from each other. I could not answer 1/10th of the comments then.

    • @Fish-Story
      @Fish-Story  3 месяца назад +1

      Unfortunately, they are mutually exclusive propositions: either lots of views and money or fewer views and personal interaction.

    • @Fish-Story
      @Fish-Story  3 месяца назад +1

      Thank you, Ethan! You are a recent but zealous supporter of ours, your comments are usually deep and contain things worth noting and learning, sometimes thought-provoking, and we value it a lot.

    • @KuhliLoachTrainer
      @KuhliLoachTrainer 3 месяца назад +1

      You are very welcome! I didn't know if I deserved such praise for my comments but if you say so:)
      I feel the same way about my channel: authentic quality over clickbait-crowd quantity.
      As long as you are enjoying whichever (if any) of my videos you choose to watch, it would not matter if absolutely no one else ever watched, subscribed, or commented. Neither that nor infinite more subscribers/views/commenters would do anything to affect the success of my goal to have fun making the videos while giving you the kind of authentic edutainment you give me and deserve to have given to you too.
      Forgot to mention I also appreciate how you don't ask viewers to subscribe or click the Like button. Unlike so many other aquarium channels, you actually understand they will do it if they want to - kudos for that!

  • @oscardean6351
    @oscardean6351 3 месяца назад +2

    The wood cats Have really grown since I last saw them, even though it wasn’t that long ago Vic

    • @Fish-Story
      @Fish-Story  3 месяца назад +1

      I assume you are talking about the firewood cats. (You got me again with the wood cats, I am so desperately used for this term to be applied with the driftwood catfish. I had typed up a whole different response thinking you are erroneously referring to the piraiba :) ). Yes, they keep growing extremely fast.

  • @COOPERSCICHILDS
    @COOPERSCICHILDS 3 месяца назад +1

    Awesome speciems great footage thanks for sharing

  • @KuhliLoachTrainer
    @KuhliLoachTrainer 3 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for the pleco shoutout:)
    This video I am definitely showing my friends at some point. The nervousness of the bass and catfish tank at feeding time directly after the addition of a new fish is a notable contrast to the zealous feeding time they got from Liam the Burmese loach and friends even immediately after they put the weather loaches in the mixed loach tank.🤣
    On the topic of the peacock bass in general: where are the final destinations?
    -Into which tank are the C. kelberi going to go when they are all grown? 1800/7K liter? One of the 4500/17K liter? Or the 25K/100K liter?
    -Are the Brokopondo bass staying for good in the 1800 gallon/7K liter? Or are they going to move up to one of the larger tanks eventually?
    -Where will the C. temensis go? One of the 4500/17K liter or the 25K/100K liter?
    -Whatever species the reality TV peacock bass are, where are they going to go? Or will they stay where they are so they can keep watching their reality TV?🤪

    • @Fish-Story
      @Fish-Story  3 месяца назад +1

      When Bigger Bad gets his own solo tank and perhaps when the funsize piraiba leaves the less aggressive 4500 gal, then the pbass are planned to go in there, granted they are of the right size. I cannot have pbass in the 25K because they might be eaten by the pima (except maybe tems) and because they are prickly. Kel is a smaller growing pbass, so I am not sure. The trio of occelaris and the azul in the 240g are our workhorse. They teach our visitors every day. May still opt to move them to 4500g in time since 240g looks too small for them. They'd do adequately in a 500 gal too.

    • @KuhliLoachTrainer
      @KuhliLoachTrainer 3 месяца назад +1

      Thank you for covering everything😃. Your answers are so wide reaching that now I have a whole bunch more questions about the answers themselves.🤣
      -Getting Bigger Bad out before the peacock bass go in is straightforward enough, but where would Fun-Size Kuma go if you're going to take it out too? I am assuming either the neighboring tank (in which case, do you think it can fend for itself with the jumbos?) or the 25K/100K liter like was talked about in our other comments (in which case, did you check its spines and determine they might be rubber-liner safe?).
      -Like with the above question, this is both straightforward and unclear. I get not wanting to move peacock bass for risk of becoming arapaima food, but why would the prickly parts be a risk to the liner? They are on the backs of the bass and it doesn't seem likely the bass would be swimming sideways or upside down anywhere near the liner.
      -If C. kelberi is smaller growing, could yours be feasible for the 1800/7K liter? I just realized if there are some peacock bass in there for good, you'd have a shot at a long term cohabiting of largemouth and peacock bass, which as a die-hard largemouth bass fan is actually pretty neat to think about.😅
      -Are you implying there are things the reality TV peacock bass could teach visitors in the 240/1K liter that they couldn't in the 4500/17K liter? Maybe I interpreted your answer wrong, but if that is what you are implying, what would those things be be?

    • @Fish-Story
      @Fish-Story  3 месяца назад +1

      @@KuhliLoachTrainer -Getting Bigger Bad out before the peacock bass go in is straightforward enough, but where would Fun-Size Kuma go if you're going to take it out too? I am assuming either the neighboring tank (in which case, do you think it can fend for itself with the jumbos?) or the 25K/100K liter like was talked about in our other comments (in which case, did you check its spines and determine they might be rubber-liner safe?).
      ***I still hope to finish and get online the 1.5K and 10K. No, I don’t think peru piraiba is able to handle the jumbos. As far as the Brachyplatystoma go, I’ve only checked and know that tigs do not have sharp spines and we had tigs before in the 25K, not for long though. But it’s a good idea to check the piraiba for the sharpness and strength of their spines. I seem to recall I checked before and found them strong and sharp but I am not 100% sure I am recalling correctly.
      -Like with the above question, this is both straightforward and unclear. I get not wanting to move peacock bass for risk of becoming arapaima food, but why would the prickly parts be a risk to the liner? They are on the backs of the bass and it doesn't seem likely the bass would be swimming sideways or upside down anywhere near the liner.
      ***They also have nasty spines in the pelvic fins and the anal fin. It’s about an unlikely accident. If one waits long enough, the accident will likely happen, low probability x long time = high probability.
      -If C. kelberi is smaller growing, could yours be feasible for the 1800/7K liter? I just realized if there are some peacock bass in there for good, you'd have a shot at a long term cohabiting of largemouth and peacock bass, which as a die-hard largemouth bass fan is actually pretty neat to think about.
      ***1800 would be a logical choice, yes, given the choice of tanks we have today.
      -Are you implying there are things the reality TV peacock bass could teach visitors in the 240/1K liter that they couldn't in the 4500/17K liter? Maybe I interpreted your answer wrong, but if that is what you are implying, what would those things be be?
      ***It is merely about the feeding convenience for the visitors. The community is different in the 240 and 4500 and the feeding and the tank mate competition and interference will be different. Ideally, one would want to feed all fish separately to avoid or lessen competition, interference, and sometimes drama.

    • @KuhliLoachTrainer
      @KuhliLoachTrainer 3 месяца назад +1

      1) Ah yes, the 10K/40K liter, I have been wanting to donate some to help that get completed. As for checking the spines, I have seen you checked the spines of Kuma in the video about its death, and they were not sharp but you said they were broken off and normally they were sharp - maybe this is what you are thinking of?
      Or maybe you checked the spines when the alpha Peru piraiba died and aren't 100 percent recalling it? If that's the case I hope this jogs your memory.
      By the way, I have a potential solution if they are sharp. Perhaps this is unfeasible for whatever reason, but on a catfish the size of Fun-Size Kuma the tips of the spines are big enough that something like cat nail caps of appropriate size could be Seachem Reef Glued (binds within seconds) onto the tips while the fish is restrained out of water for a short time.
      2) Yikes, I didn't know about the pelvic or anal fins.
      3) Yay! If you do go that route, looking forward to see the long term largemouth bass and peacock bass combo:)
      4) I take it your prior experience with peacock bass in the 4500/17K liter must have taught you that?

    • @Fish-Story
      @Fish-Story  3 месяца назад +1

      1) Ah yes, the 10K/40K liter, I have been wanting to donate some to help that get completed. As for checking the spines, I have seen you checked the spines of Kuma in the video about its death, and they were not sharp but you said they were broken off and normally they were sharp - maybe this is what you are thinking of? Or maybe you checked the spines when the alpha Peru piraiba died and aren't 100 percent recalling it? If that's the case I hope this jogs your memory.
      ***Great! Thank you. Yes, it jogs my memory. I recall thinking surprised that tig’s spines were not sharp but piraiba’s were. Hence, no, piraiba cannot go into the unprotected 25K.
      By the way, I have a potential solution if they are sharp. Perhaps this is unfeasible for whatever reason, but on a catfish the size of Fun-Size Kuma the tips of the spines are big enough that something like cat nail caps of appropriate size could be Seachem Reef Glued (binds within seconds) onto the tips while the fish is restrained out of water for a short time.
      ***Never heard of this. Thank you. Will look into it. I know for shipping sometimes airline tubing clips are fitted on catfish spines, but this is of course temporary and short term. As of now, I think this is a questionable approach and could only be fathomed for fish that are done growing pretty much, like the Peru piraiba is. ... In many catfish the spines are skinned, so this cannot work well on them.

      4) I take it your prior experience with peacock bass in the 4500/17K liter must have taught you that?
      ***Yes and it is also common sense. For the sake of the pbass, it may still worth it to move them to the 4500. Will be decided when we come to that bridge.