Wow, happen to have any pics of that beast? How big is he currently? They are actually smaller in terms of body mass, but are the longest of the eels - reaching 13 feet long. The giant moray isn't the biggest of the eels though, a european conger can weigh about 240 pounds - talk about a true monster.Never seen one. Heard of someone that keeps an even bigger moray though (strophiodon satete)
The great thing about morays is that you don't need a very large tank respective to how huge they can get.
To each his own, you wouldn't have to do much to convince me to set up something to keep one of those. Look up Blacktip's 1700 gallon plywood shark tank, that would probably do pretty well to keep one for life - maybe even throw a green in there. To each his own about colors, Zoodiver had one in a 5,000 gallon column one time and that thing looked pretty sweet to me.First, Gymnothorax javanicus (Giant MorayEels) is not commonly in trade market and it coloration not very impress for a display tank.
Second, it's hard to convince someone to have a thousand gallons tank just a single eel because it will eat all tank mates when it's large enough, it also will eat other eels species if smaller than itself.
Note:
I don't have Gymnothorax Javanicus but I do have Gymnothorax Favagineus and their behave pretty much the same. My Tesselata is a killer, it's killed/ate Gymnothorax fimbriatus (yellowhead moray), Gymnothorax moringa (brown spotted Moray) along with some large Angle fishes. You might see them live peacefully for sometime (months) then tank mates started disappear once its reached certain size or bigger than other tank mates.
I mean, I love morays as well, but I'd rather be able to keep multiples or heck, other fish.To each his own, you wouldn't have to do much to convince me to set up something to keep one of those. Look up Blacktip's 1700 gallon plywood shark tank, that would probably do pretty well to keep one for life - maybe even throw a green in there. To each his own about colors, Zoodiver had one in a 5,000 gallon column one time and that thing looked pretty sweet to me.
Yeah, with the bigger morays you're pretty much restricted to the biggest of the big - larger rays (southern stingrays, roughtail stingrays, spotted eagle rays, mantas, etc), big groupers (queensland, goliath, etc), and bigger sharks (bull, scalloped/great hammerheads, tigers, etc). Not much you can keep without any risk of losing it. Then again... a dimly lit tank with a giant moray in it during feeding time would be pretty awesome.I mean, I love morays as well, but I'd rather be able to keep multiples or heck, other fish.
Technically, fish bigger than the moray aren't safe either, as morays are entirely willing to tear off a part of the fish's body instead of outright swallowing it.
A moray with a huge school of damsel species look awesome too hehehe.I mean, I love morays as well, but I'd rather be able to keep multiples or heck, other fish.