No, I don't know. It was big already, perhaps around 4.5"-5".You know how old it was prior? I'd guess no more than 10 wouldn't doubt less though
No, I don't know. It was big already, perhaps around 4.5"-5".You know how old it was prior? I'd guess no more than 10 wouldn't doubt less though
Sorry for your loss.No, I don't know. It was big already, perhaps around 4.5"-5".
They can live 40-50 yearsSorry for your loss.
Your fish looked healthy, well cared for. It was a male, not-too-old fish. I think something unfortunate happened, not age. Again, a bummer.
I inherited 3 ~6-6.5 inch dollars, known to be 14 years old, from a school. I have had them for 1 year, and they are doing well, courting each other. These fish can live long lives.
Thank you. Can you please provide support for this statement?They can live 40-50 years
Used to be a person I followed who had a very old silver dollar, they stopped updating his age when he was 47 years old, since then I've run into a number of people with s.ds well into their twenties ,40s and 30s,I doubt they live that long in the wild tho, anyone know their wild life expectancy?Thank you. Can you please provide support for this statement?
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One of the wide-bars has hit a wall or something pretty hard, smashed its snout badly, struggled for a week with what looked like a brain or central nervous system injury as it couldn't swim right, and then perished. I didn't expect that from a silver dollar.
I wonder if a couple dozen of rescue African cichlids are to blame because these have been added recently and have been pestering the SDs a bit, apparently when I am not looking. I actually had to transfer the only surviving common SD to another 240 gal as it looked stressed and its fins were thoroughly tattered.
The 12 red hooks (9 youngsters plus 3 adults from the 4500 gal) and two surviving wide-bars remain in the same 240 gal.
The dead guy grew from 3" to 7"-8" in 8 months with us. I also noted that when they are seriously stressed, their tummy turns bright red and they look strikingly like a red-belly pacu baby.
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Wow! Mind blowing. Thanks, bro. Were they the common SDs or different species? I assume common as all these fancy ones appear to have started to come in not that long ago, 10-20 years ago?Used to be a person I followed who had a very old silver dollar, they stopped updating his age when he was 47 years old, since then I've run into a number of people with s.ds well into their twenties ,40s and 30s,I doubt they live that long in the wild tho, anyone know their wild life expectancy?
They were all of the common varieties, nothing to exoticWow! Mind blowing. Thanks, bro. Were they the common SDs or different species? I assume common as all these fancy ones appear to have started to come in not that long ago, 10-20 years ago?