John you are correct, they don't kill each other right away it takes a couple days. I do have a few mahseers and an albino clown knife, but looking at this picture although hard to see its the dorado clamping on to what's left of its tail.Do you have other fish in the tank? The killing may be from other fish. Dorado may fight with each other, but they don't do quick kill. They may died from injury, but it usually take days. I once kept small Dorado with frontosa. Every morning, I found a head left at the bottom of the tank. At first, I thought it was Dorado killed the small/weak one of the pack. It took me 3 days and 3 Dorado to realize that the frontosa killed/ate the Dorado
Yes, the damage does look like caused by other dorado. You sure have some mean ones there. I hope those last 2 tolerate each other.John you are correct, they don't kill each other right away it takes a couple days. I do have a few mahseers and an albino clown knife, but looking at this picture although hard to see its the dorado clamping on to what's left of its tail.
I put this one out of its misery. I'm down to 2 and they are both in perfect condition and I have yet to witness any bickering between these two. Here's hoping
Whoa that's some crazy aggression there.
Crazy is right. Looks like I got the meanest SOB of the bunch. A real serial killer. I'm not sure what to do with him. After the last murder everything was fine for a few days. I didn't see any evidence of aggression, got home late yesterday and every fish in the tank is missing a piece of its tail. I only have 1 tank so separation isn't an option. These fish have been in a 450 tall 5x3x4 I knew this wouldn't work long term but it's a lot of space and I figured it'd last longer than 2 months.Whoa that's some crazy aggression there.
From the pic, the fish look like they are 5" or around that size, mine were aggressive at this size, until I kept them in the 50 gallon, when I moved the group to the 135 gal, things calmed down a bit.
And then moved them to the 220 gallon and now they are around 9", and during this summer, there were times when aggression, was a bit high, I have added long branch like driftwood as decor, and I see now that aggression and nipping has reduced.
To be honest I'm not sure. I recently realized my heater controller wasn't working. My tank had been unheated for who knows how long. So tank temp is close to room temp, somewhere in the 70's. I hadn't noticed any odd behavior and they all eat like pigs so I haven't replaced the controller yet. Are you suggesting lowering the temp helps with aggression? I may have to lower the temp to 32°F to stop this guy.What's the temperature you're maintaining the tank at, any possibility yo reduce one or two degree Celsius.
Gradually, that is, over a period of a week or a forth night