New Piranha!
Picked him up from Manchester yesterday, 10" Pygocentrus Nattereri Ternetzi variant (yellow belly) natural to Southern Brazil and Northern Argentina. :cool:
He wrote off two nets transferring him into the fish box to transport him and a third getting him into my tank at the other end!!! :eek: Click Thumbnail: http://img1.uploadimages.net/thumbs/...___Big_p_2.jpg http://img1.uploadimages.net/thumbs/tn_571414lecter.jpg :D Previous Threads for Reference: Clip of my new baby psychos! Venezuelan Piranha.... my new psychos! |
Cute :D
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"Here kitty kitty kitty..." ;)
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Just had a look through the other threads, very very interesting
nice one :thumb: |
Ugly little ******* aint he? :D
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Thanks, I'm pretty chuffed with him actually... he must be one of the largest Ternetzi's in the UK! :D
The previous owner named him Lecter because he ate one of his tankmates, so I'm going to have to keep a careful eye on him! :eek: You may also be interested in a programme on Channel Five 20:00 on Tuesday "Nigel Marven's Piranha Adventure" which is IMO one of the best and factually accurate documentaries on piranha, definately moreso than the American sensationlised "Piranha Attack" which has been repeated several times recently. This one definately benefits from the "British touch". ;) Nigel Marven's Piranha Adventure (Nature) Time - 20:00 - 21:00 (1 hour long) When - Tuesday 12th October on five Presenter Nigel Marven journeys to South America in search of the world's deadliest fish. Nigel snorkels in the flooded forest of the Amazon to observe the remarkable behaviour of piranhas and their prey; joins an Indian family as they prepare a meal of recently caught piranhas and dresses in chain-mail to feed a shoal of red-bellied piranha. (Subtitles, Stereo) |
Time - 20:00 - 21:00 (1 hour long) |
Can you get him to hold a matchbox for scale purposes?
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I was going to give you a shout on that prog. when I saw it advertised last night ajm.
I know I will be watching, looks good. |
Originally Posted by Jap2Scrap
Can you get him to hold a matchbox for scale purposes?
You want him to hold a match box? YOU ask him! :D Edit: you can see the scale relative to when my reds were babies compare the size of the gravel in the second picture above to the gravel in this pic: http://www.piranha-fury.com/photopos...august2003.jpg Its the same gravel! :eek: |
Aww nice one AJM i think he looks quite cute! think he will mix well with my male guppy :D .... maybe not ;)
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Now that is what I call a bad boy... :D
Always wanted Piranha when when I was younger... do you reckon he's be okay in a community tank with cardinal tetra's? :norty: How big a tank have you got him in? |
Originally Posted by messiah
Now that is what I call a bad boy... :D
Always wanted Piranha when when I was younger... do you reckon he's be okay in a community tank with cardinal tetra's? :norty: How big a tank have you got him in? Hence, I am having to keep him on his own until I have a tank big enough to accomodate his cannabalistic territorial tendancies without having to eat any of my existing shoal! :D As for the tetras.... the previous owner had a dozen or so danios in his tank originally.... I counted just one yesterday! I would imagine tetras would be Lecter's "scampi waiting to happen"! ;) |
awesome :D do you keep them all in the same tank then?
Curious how expensive and what conditions they need? Si |
Originally Posted by super_si
awesome :D do you keep them all in the same tank then?
Curious how expensive and what conditions they need? Si I am planning to commission a huge tank to try and keep them all together. Despite the bickering a shoal is a more natural situation for them and they seem to be happier together getting nipped occasionally than being on their own! The cost is entirely dependent on the size and rarity of the fish. 1" baby red bellies can cost as little as £3 whereas a 10" Rhom could be £250+. A 16" manueli could be several hundred quid! Conditions as per any tropical fish. Around 81 degress F and pristine water conditions! As piranha are such messy eaters with such high metabolisms you need a *lot* of mechanical and biological filtration on the tank. They prefer lighting that isn't too harsh and enjoy a good bit of current in tank but with still areas where they can chill. :cool: |
wicked :)
Do you often taken them out of the tank? had any mishaps? Si |
Is your current tank sumped mate?
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would a protein skimmer be much use then or are they for marine tanks only? (Assuming Piranha is freshwater that is!)
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Originally Posted by super_si
wicked :)
Do you often taken them out of the tank? had any mishaps? Si No accidents so far, although I have had a few close shaves and several destroyed nets! A caribe tried to jump out of a bucket as I was looking into it and he bounced off my nose! :eek: |
lol thats scary
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Originally Posted by mad_dr
Is your current tank sumped mate?
would a protein skimmer be much use then or are they for marine tanks only? (Assuming Piranha is freshwater that is!) In a freshwater aquarium you can let organic compounds be broken down as it is much easier and cheaper to change fresh water. Apart from that, I don't think they would be as efficient in a freshwater aquarium as I believe they rely on buoyancy due to the higher density of saltwater. |
My bro had 5 red bellies in his 6th by 2ft by 2ft tank, miserable buggers they were, seemed ok then we came back from the pub one night and the tank was blood red, two of them had absolutely annihiliated the other 4, two were still alive with their spines exposed :eek: I'm glad we were pissed fishing them out to finish them off
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Originally Posted by Andy Porter
My bro had 5 red bellies in his 6th by 2ft by 2ft tank, miserable buggers they were, seemed ok then we came back from the pub one night and the tank was blood red, two of them had absolutely annihiliated the other 4, two were still alive with their spines exposed :eek: I'm glad we were pissed fishing them out to finish them off
I am really surprised that happened with only 5 reds in a 180gal tank! How big were they? Edited to add: was there anything else in the tank? The water shouldn't have been red, piranha hardly bleed at all when injured for obvious reasons! |
No there was nothing else in there m8, it was an absolute mess I can tell you. The two that lived were big, like about 6 or 8 inches long, I'll try and get a pic.....
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Pic not working?
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:eek:
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What his 'pet' name :D
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Originally Posted by Jap2Scrap
Can you get him to hold a matchbox for scale purposes?
Click Me! http://img1.uploadimages.net/thumbs/...cter_phone.jpg We have had a couple of setbacks so far: 1) when he was first in the tank he was quite nervous and had a few tantrums knocking the heater off the side and dislodging the filter inlet! In the process he actually broke the heater!! :eek: I only noticed the next day when I stuck my hand in to drop some sandeel in for him and the water felt cold. It had actually dropped from 27deg C to 18deg C!!! He wasn't showing any undue signs of stress, but it was lucky I noticed because I think if it had got much lower it could have been bad news! 2) Since he has started eating (and pooing) in earnest again the resulting surge in excreted ammonia caused a spike as there is always a delay in the multiplication of nitrifying bacteria in the filter. I have managed this by small water changes. Ammonia is almost back down to zero, and now we are in the middle of a nitrite spike, the second phase of the cycle. Again, I am managing this with small water changes so levels don't get harmfully high. Whilst this saves the fish any undue stress it does prelong the the time required for the bacteria to catch up unfortunately. It is actually alarming how much food this fish can tuck away, he has a tardis belly! However I am trying to ration him for his own good until there is enough bacteria present in the filter to cope with his "ablutions"! :D |
here's a clip of him hoovering up his third whole 5" sandeel a minute ago!!!
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