Amazing buddy. And I agree with Troy. I’ve replayed this video like 3 times already lol.
The sizes are in the video title - the larger pair is ~1.5', the smaller are ~1'.Any idea how big they are?
I cannot imagine how much food you must go through to feed all of these fish.
Do any of your fish have a stab wound in the face? Judging by the location it may (it's a long shot), reveal the culpritSkip two morning meals for the two 1.5' VATF (I hadn't offered fish for two breakfasts - VATF take pellets but evidently they don't fill the ATF up) and you get this. Minus one vulture. This vulture was 18". The ATF took plenty of flesh out of the hapless guy in several minutes - I didn't witness it but only stepped out for 10 minutes maybe. The remaining 5 vultures are ok.
Warning, graphic content. Parental and shrink care advised.
The reason I think it's VATF because no one else in the tank could or would do it just like that and because of the telltale bite looks. The bites are very clean. There is no evidence of tearing off, yanking or shredding or shaking side to side or death-rolling but with each bite a mouthful of flesh is removed cleanly. They just keep coming back to take new bites out of where they started because it is the easiest as the hide is the hardest to penetrate and partition. On the right side they kept doing that until the backbone stopped them. They bit all the way to uncover several inches of the backbone. The vulture was in deep shock but still alive when I pulled it out.
The VATF had done it before to other fish I believe (see above), which included sun catfish, bala shark, tinfoil barb, and wels.
What is generally believed about the ATF, viz., that they don't go after fish too large to be considered on their usual menu even in captivity, is not so true in my experience. If the bigger VATF get hungry even a little bit, they don't hesitate to attack fish of equal or a bit greater size. So far. If a tank mate is smaller and not armored like a pleco or as fast as a dorado or as aggressive as a large cichlid, I think it'll have no chance.
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That's impossible for me to find out unless I'd get very lucky. Fish move fast, not all of them are at the viewing window, and a stab wound can be a tiny spot.Do any of your fish have a stab wound in the face? Judging by the location it may (it's a long shot), reveal the culprit
IDK. Seems unpredictable to me. I don't think that competition is the reason - half their tank mates are competitors... and there is no genetic component as the tigers and wolves are from different continents.Could the tigers view the wolf as competition or a threat? Or vice versa?