- Price
- 100
- Region
- Southern California
- State
- California
- Location
- west covina
- Pickup or shipping
- Shipping or Pickup
Do not message me here, but email me at amazonaq@gmail.com
check us out on Instagram @fugupuff
If you don't have instagram, get it just to look at pictures, can connect with so many fish hobbyists!
Who else specializes in Brackish fish? Read the bottom of this email if you haven't heard my speech before and how to care for these fish.
Mostly brackish - many first time and new items!
Monodactylus kottelati - Wild caught mono with a taller profile and more orange on the fins. they're about a half dollar coin body size $45.00 each
Monodactylus sp. sebae nickel size body. These are farmed, I believe hybrids of M. sebae and argenteus. They're sebae like with yellow tipped fins, but they all look a little different from each other. $35.00 each
Parascorpaena cf. picta - like a stone fish sculpin mix. changes colors to match the surrounding. First time keeping for me, no guarantees on success or any additional information, but I would imagine similar to any stone fish scorpion fish family. 4" $125.00 each
Chelonodon patoca - milk spot puffer 1"-2" babies, cute and relatively easy to keep. $35.00 each
Sphyraena putnamiae - 2" true barracuda. only one piece $75.00 each, caught in the estuary.
Chanos chanos - the milk fish! Probably first time offered in the hobby in USA?
6-7" chunky ones. They're found in fresh and salt water, there are big giant 3 feet ones in the Honolulu airport pond with kois if I remember correctly. Their eyes get a lens that covers it with a fat pad. I've never kept these before $125.00 each
Kuhlia rupestris - 2" $25.00 each 4" 45.00 each
These jungle perch are tough and fast. They look super cool in a group. Can grow to 12" or so. In Asia they often keep them together with arowanas instead of silver dollars. They're found mostly in fresh and brackish water. will eat anything.
Lutjanus fulvus - 4" only one piece this time., $100.00
yellow margined snapper, rather peaceful for a snapper.,
Omobranchus ferox - tooth blenny $25.00 each
Omobranchus faciolaticeps top hat blenny $30.00 each
one of my favorites, interacts with you, smartest fish out there.
Periopthalmus modestus - bigger sized mudskippers 3-4" $35.00 each
Taiwan origin - not the Nigerian sp.
Giuris margaritacea - snakehead gudgeon - this is patterned like a chameleon and can reach over 12" can tolerate and live in a wide range of water from full salt to full freshwater. They will eat pellets and small shrimps. Rarely offered or seen 5" big right now $65.00 each
Epinephelus lanceolatus - captive bred queensland grouper. These were bred in low brackish water, destined for restaurants in China. I rescued these babies, that will eventually grow big enough to eat everything in your tank and your dog, you've been warned. 3" babies. $125.00 each
Echidna rhodochilus - white cheeked moray eel. These fish are like marine green morays, with a velvety green and brown skin that has a reflective tint. They came in very clean and are already eating smelt and shrimp, currently living with some cichlids. 10-14" big $65.00 each
Gymnothorax polyuranodon - I'm all out.
Bottom dwellers
Hypostomus luteus c.b. babies 1.75" - $225.00 each. only 5 pieces total, that's all, that's it.
c.b. L240 Vampire pleco 1.5" babies, super clean and sharp looking. $35.00 each
c.b. L183 Ancistrus dolichoptera - white seam bushy nose 1" $20.00 each
Hypostomus margaritifer - 10" one piece only., jet black with yellow spots. These can also tolerate cold water, peaceful towards other fish. very rare in the hobby. $350.00
Hypostomus luteus adults - Only 1 piece phase 3. Message for serious inquiries.
Rhindoras dorbingyi - super cool and active mid sized armor catfish
3" $45.00
Cichlids
Heros severum super red 3.5" $25.00 each
these are the reddest of any severums out there.
Acaricthys heckeli albino - 2" are back and won't last $30.00 each.
Geophagus sveni - 3-4" captive bred with super nice colors already $35.00 each
Oreochromis niloticus sub species Eduardianus Lake Kivu- rare f1 of a wild type tilapia 3-4" $45 each
Pterophyllum scalare "red devil" very high coverage red koi angels "nickel sized" $25.00 each
C.B. Pterophyllum altum - altum angels all out!
Barbs / Cyprinids
Something I don't normally sell or carry sp.
Short body, platinum, butterfly ogon koi. 4-5" $75.00 each
I personally don't keep or collect short body fish, but when I saw these in a group they're pretty cool. In Taiwan people grow them up to keep with Stingrays, I guess they look like a platinum pheonix, with long flowing fins, and they're easy to keep and will eat left over food. Pretty neat, maybe I'll throw a few in my pond.
Culter erythropterus - 6" these can get about 2-3 feet, like a mix between a tarpon and barb. Probably never imported into the USA before. Google up for adult pictures. $125.00 each.
Tor tambroides super red from Tembat - for the people who know how rare these are and how red they get. 6" fish showing red tail., limited quantity. half are sold already and some waiting to ship out. I'll show the adults on IG later. serious inquiries only. The fun is to grow them and groom them to reach their full potential of red color.
Tor cf. khudree 2" babies, wild from India. $75.00 each, limited qty.
Spinibarbus hollandi - these are the Taiwan equivalent of an Indian masheer, same slender build and predatory face, will reach 4 feet or so in the wild. Rare to find in the hobby, cold tolerant 2.5" $30.00 each
Opsariichthys pachycephalus - Taiwan zacco the males get super orange with blue flank and red anal fin, displays flashing colors when they're mature. 2" subadults., cold tolerant and will eat anything. Easy to keep, hard to find $20.00 each
Oddball fish
Tetradon baiylei - hairy puffer 2" babies, eating out of my hand., video will be posted later on IG or FB. $75.00 each
Rhinogobius rubromaculatus - red spotted goby. recently reclassified into several new species and subspecies. Wild caught Taiwan 1" babies $25.00 each
Macrobrachium gracillirostre adults-
These are the most beautiful shrimps out there, period! they have been bred, but it takes some dedication to raise the babies. 3-4" adults $75.00 a pair
Papyrocranus afer - pom pom afer knife 16" show specimen, one only. beautiful markings, eat cut fish. $175.00
Live delivery guaranteed. Paypal to this email address or Venmo can be arranged.
Shipping via fedex is still good, usually 65-85 anywhere east of California. No extra charge for box, bags, and heatpacks.
Larger orders can go air cargo which would be $65.00 for a huge box, but for orders over 500 and over.
Here is my understanding of brackish water, and I've kept and researched this topic for over 25 years, yes I am old. I've collected and kept brackish fish ever since I was a kid and I've traveled to many countries up until now and have done the same.
Misconceptions
People usually turn away as soon as they hear the word "brackish"
People often say "they'll need salt water as they grow older" which has no scientific backing whatsoever.
People think "salt" is the magic ingredient to keep them alive, which it isn't. Its not sodium chloride that makes them live, but a higher level of Calcium, magnesium that helps them grow and do well.
People often think, monodactylus, scats and spotted puffers are the only fish they can keep when there are thousands of species that venture into the brackish regions from freshwater and many come from the ocean. I will list the few I can think of off the top of my head with supporting evidence, and thank you for reading this far.
All the salmons, trouts, and chars, have land locked populations and ocean going populations, and this can interchange. Also not all anadromous pacific salmons die after spawning. There are sea run brown trouts, and brook trouts, and many more!
Most of the Poecilidae sp. like mollies, guppies, sword tails can and will live in pure freshwater, Mexico city where many are found, and down to the salt water in the Salton sea, where only a few species survive.
There was an article about Central American Cichlids, red devil, managuense, and dovii, etc... "Guapote" that live and breed in the ocean tidepools, published in TFH back in the early 1990s. I have severums that have bred in my brackish tank and raised their fry.
For the Heiko Bleher fans, he did a presentation a few years back, that showed pictures of red groupers and snappers that were caught in a landlocked lake.
Lake Taal in the Philippines which is believed to host populations of a few salt water fish, including the giant trevally, GT.
Many lakes host Bull sharks, charcharinus leucas - that travel hundreds, even thousand miles inland. Lake Nicaragua, Mississippi river, Ganges river, Zambezi river, etc, and there are many other sharks, like Glyphys sp. that is also found far up into the freshwater regions.
Blennies., did you know there is a complete freshwater species of blenny from Spain? This fish has eluded me forever., somebody want to ship me some???? Salaria fluviatilis. Similar to the ones like Omobranchus sp.
Epinephelus lanceolatus - Jeremy Wade caught a 50 pounder that was how many miles up river? and they breed them in brackish water for aquaculture now, seen with my own eyes. but many other species in the genus in Asia, as well as the giant grouper from the Atlantic, Epinephalus itajara can be found far into the river.
Centrompomus sp. snooks - i've actually caught small landlocked ones in lakes.
Most sturgeons - some go into the ocean, some are landlocked.
Alligator gars - have been seen and found in the ocean around Louisiana - I've read., maybe someone from there can chime in.
Tilapia of many species, oreochromis genus are found in salt water, like Salton sea, Alawai canal Hawaii., and around the world.
Brachyplatystoma filementosum, vaillanti - these are found just a couple of miles from the ocean in nearly salt water as well as up in Rio Nanay thousands of miles from the ocean.
Barbs, many are actually found in brackish water. The ever so hated and controlled Grass carp that was introduced by the US government, are actually raised in brackish water to enhance their meat quality in Asia., and there is naturally a family called Tribolodon sp. found around Japan that is the most colorful barb that actually is anadromous! I've caught a fat grown out gold fish miles from the ocean in brackish water, he took bait, so he wasn't stressed, and he was fat.
King mackeral, there is documents of a Scomberoides sp. that has been found way up in the Mekong river. According to Oliver Lucanus which I met many years ago, use to joke about how there was a freshwater "tuna" like fish which is this!
Megalops cyrpinoides and atlanticus - tarpons from Asia and the Atlantic can go far into the rivers.
The list can go on and on., many of the drums, some are brackish, some are fresh and salt.. Many of the tongue fish, soles, and flounders. Most puffers besides the deep reef and open pelagic species venture far into the freshwater. Acanthopagrus, Therapon sp., most of the gobies. many share relatives in the ocean, brackish, and some are landlocked while their cousins have babies that descend into the ocean to complete their life cycle. Many of the aguiliformes, true eels, and some gymnothorax sp. Many of the percadae, like Lates japonicus, calcarifer, lateolabrax, but also the Mandarin perch, like Siniperca. Plotosus, and the other stinging catfish species, many of the pangasius., and Himantura sp. rays. Notesthes robusta - the bullrout, this fish has eluded me my whole life. I need it. All the scats, and monos, and many of the jack trevally. In Hawaii, you can catch 3 species of Jack trevally far into the rivers. All the mullets, and they have shared landlocked ancestors. gudgeons, monos, archers. There are a dozen of species of Aridae sp, like sciades coumas, parkeri to cryptarius truncatus - google this one up, super cool- from South America to Asia that live in freshwater, some can reach 3-4 feet in length.
Remember that most rivers and estuaries, when the tide goes out, it happens once or twice a day the water becomes freshwater, and when the tide comes in, it becomes salt water., so the fish live in between and move up and down between these areas. They do not require a specific gravity or salinity to survive., and the shift is rather quick. Brackish fish are actually some of the most tolerant fish of all!
Part of the fun of fish keeping in being able to crack the code to keeping a certain species and learning about them. There is just so much about science and nature that we just don't understand and it is hard for us to unlearn what we've been told all of our lives, but remember that science is fluid instead of concrete. Once upon a time people did believe that the earth was flat and cutting part of your frontal lobe out was beneficial for mental health. Sorry for the typographical errors, and thank you for listening, happy fish keeping. Share this message!
check us out on Instagram @fugupuff
Rare Fish, USA (@fugupuff) • Instagram photos and videos
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If you don't have instagram, get it just to look at pictures, can connect with so many fish hobbyists!
Who else specializes in Brackish fish? Read the bottom of this email if you haven't heard my speech before and how to care for these fish.
Mostly brackish - many first time and new items!
Monodactylus kottelati - Wild caught mono with a taller profile and more orange on the fins. they're about a half dollar coin body size $45.00 each
Monodactylus sp. sebae nickel size body. These are farmed, I believe hybrids of M. sebae and argenteus. They're sebae like with yellow tipped fins, but they all look a little different from each other. $35.00 each
Parascorpaena cf. picta - like a stone fish sculpin mix. changes colors to match the surrounding. First time keeping for me, no guarantees on success or any additional information, but I would imagine similar to any stone fish scorpion fish family. 4" $125.00 each
Chelonodon patoca - milk spot puffer 1"-2" babies, cute and relatively easy to keep. $35.00 each
Sphyraena putnamiae - 2" true barracuda. only one piece $75.00 each, caught in the estuary.
Chanos chanos - the milk fish! Probably first time offered in the hobby in USA?
6-7" chunky ones. They're found in fresh and salt water, there are big giant 3 feet ones in the Honolulu airport pond with kois if I remember correctly. Their eyes get a lens that covers it with a fat pad. I've never kept these before $125.00 each
Kuhlia rupestris - 2" $25.00 each 4" 45.00 each
These jungle perch are tough and fast. They look super cool in a group. Can grow to 12" or so. In Asia they often keep them together with arowanas instead of silver dollars. They're found mostly in fresh and brackish water. will eat anything.
Lutjanus fulvus - 4" only one piece this time., $100.00
yellow margined snapper, rather peaceful for a snapper.,
Omobranchus ferox - tooth blenny $25.00 each
Omobranchus faciolaticeps top hat blenny $30.00 each
one of my favorites, interacts with you, smartest fish out there.
Periopthalmus modestus - bigger sized mudskippers 3-4" $35.00 each
Taiwan origin - not the Nigerian sp.
Giuris margaritacea - snakehead gudgeon - this is patterned like a chameleon and can reach over 12" can tolerate and live in a wide range of water from full salt to full freshwater. They will eat pellets and small shrimps. Rarely offered or seen 5" big right now $65.00 each
Epinephelus lanceolatus - captive bred queensland grouper. These were bred in low brackish water, destined for restaurants in China. I rescued these babies, that will eventually grow big enough to eat everything in your tank and your dog, you've been warned. 3" babies. $125.00 each
Echidna rhodochilus - white cheeked moray eel. These fish are like marine green morays, with a velvety green and brown skin that has a reflective tint. They came in very clean and are already eating smelt and shrimp, currently living with some cichlids. 10-14" big $65.00 each
Gymnothorax polyuranodon - I'm all out.
Bottom dwellers
Hypostomus luteus c.b. babies 1.75" - $225.00 each. only 5 pieces total, that's all, that's it.
c.b. L240 Vampire pleco 1.5" babies, super clean and sharp looking. $35.00 each
c.b. L183 Ancistrus dolichoptera - white seam bushy nose 1" $20.00 each
Hypostomus margaritifer - 10" one piece only., jet black with yellow spots. These can also tolerate cold water, peaceful towards other fish. very rare in the hobby. $350.00
Hypostomus luteus adults - Only 1 piece phase 3. Message for serious inquiries.
Rhindoras dorbingyi - super cool and active mid sized armor catfish
3" $45.00
Cichlids
Heros severum super red 3.5" $25.00 each
these are the reddest of any severums out there.
Acaricthys heckeli albino - 2" are back and won't last $30.00 each.
Geophagus sveni - 3-4" captive bred with super nice colors already $35.00 each
Oreochromis niloticus sub species Eduardianus Lake Kivu- rare f1 of a wild type tilapia 3-4" $45 each
Pterophyllum scalare "red devil" very high coverage red koi angels "nickel sized" $25.00 each
C.B. Pterophyllum altum - altum angels all out!
Barbs / Cyprinids
Something I don't normally sell or carry sp.
Short body, platinum, butterfly ogon koi. 4-5" $75.00 each
I personally don't keep or collect short body fish, but when I saw these in a group they're pretty cool. In Taiwan people grow them up to keep with Stingrays, I guess they look like a platinum pheonix, with long flowing fins, and they're easy to keep and will eat left over food. Pretty neat, maybe I'll throw a few in my pond.
Culter erythropterus - 6" these can get about 2-3 feet, like a mix between a tarpon and barb. Probably never imported into the USA before. Google up for adult pictures. $125.00 each.
Tor tambroides super red from Tembat - for the people who know how rare these are and how red they get. 6" fish showing red tail., limited quantity. half are sold already and some waiting to ship out. I'll show the adults on IG later. serious inquiries only. The fun is to grow them and groom them to reach their full potential of red color.
Tor cf. khudree 2" babies, wild from India. $75.00 each, limited qty.
Spinibarbus hollandi - these are the Taiwan equivalent of an Indian masheer, same slender build and predatory face, will reach 4 feet or so in the wild. Rare to find in the hobby, cold tolerant 2.5" $30.00 each
Opsariichthys pachycephalus - Taiwan zacco the males get super orange with blue flank and red anal fin, displays flashing colors when they're mature. 2" subadults., cold tolerant and will eat anything. Easy to keep, hard to find $20.00 each
Oddball fish
Tetradon baiylei - hairy puffer 2" babies, eating out of my hand., video will be posted later on IG or FB. $75.00 each
Rhinogobius rubromaculatus - red spotted goby. recently reclassified into several new species and subspecies. Wild caught Taiwan 1" babies $25.00 each
Macrobrachium gracillirostre adults-
These are the most beautiful shrimps out there, period! they have been bred, but it takes some dedication to raise the babies. 3-4" adults $75.00 a pair
Papyrocranus afer - pom pom afer knife 16" show specimen, one only. beautiful markings, eat cut fish. $175.00
Live delivery guaranteed. Paypal to this email address or Venmo can be arranged.
Shipping via fedex is still good, usually 65-85 anywhere east of California. No extra charge for box, bags, and heatpacks.
Larger orders can go air cargo which would be $65.00 for a huge box, but for orders over 500 and over.
Here is my understanding of brackish water, and I've kept and researched this topic for over 25 years, yes I am old. I've collected and kept brackish fish ever since I was a kid and I've traveled to many countries up until now and have done the same.
Misconceptions
People usually turn away as soon as they hear the word "brackish"
People often say "they'll need salt water as they grow older" which has no scientific backing whatsoever.
People think "salt" is the magic ingredient to keep them alive, which it isn't. Its not sodium chloride that makes them live, but a higher level of Calcium, magnesium that helps them grow and do well.
People often think, monodactylus, scats and spotted puffers are the only fish they can keep when there are thousands of species that venture into the brackish regions from freshwater and many come from the ocean. I will list the few I can think of off the top of my head with supporting evidence, and thank you for reading this far.
All the salmons, trouts, and chars, have land locked populations and ocean going populations, and this can interchange. Also not all anadromous pacific salmons die after spawning. There are sea run brown trouts, and brook trouts, and many more!
Most of the Poecilidae sp. like mollies, guppies, sword tails can and will live in pure freshwater, Mexico city where many are found, and down to the salt water in the Salton sea, where only a few species survive.
There was an article about Central American Cichlids, red devil, managuense, and dovii, etc... "Guapote" that live and breed in the ocean tidepools, published in TFH back in the early 1990s. I have severums that have bred in my brackish tank and raised their fry.
For the Heiko Bleher fans, he did a presentation a few years back, that showed pictures of red groupers and snappers that were caught in a landlocked lake.
Lake Taal in the Philippines which is believed to host populations of a few salt water fish, including the giant trevally, GT.
Many lakes host Bull sharks, charcharinus leucas - that travel hundreds, even thousand miles inland. Lake Nicaragua, Mississippi river, Ganges river, Zambezi river, etc, and there are many other sharks, like Glyphys sp. that is also found far up into the freshwater regions.
Blennies., did you know there is a complete freshwater species of blenny from Spain? This fish has eluded me forever., somebody want to ship me some???? Salaria fluviatilis. Similar to the ones like Omobranchus sp.
Epinephelus lanceolatus - Jeremy Wade caught a 50 pounder that was how many miles up river? and they breed them in brackish water for aquaculture now, seen with my own eyes. but many other species in the genus in Asia, as well as the giant grouper from the Atlantic, Epinephalus itajara can be found far into the river.
Centrompomus sp. snooks - i've actually caught small landlocked ones in lakes.
Most sturgeons - some go into the ocean, some are landlocked.
Alligator gars - have been seen and found in the ocean around Louisiana - I've read., maybe someone from there can chime in.
Tilapia of many species, oreochromis genus are found in salt water, like Salton sea, Alawai canal Hawaii., and around the world.
Brachyplatystoma filementosum, vaillanti - these are found just a couple of miles from the ocean in nearly salt water as well as up in Rio Nanay thousands of miles from the ocean.
Barbs, many are actually found in brackish water. The ever so hated and controlled Grass carp that was introduced by the US government, are actually raised in brackish water to enhance their meat quality in Asia., and there is naturally a family called Tribolodon sp. found around Japan that is the most colorful barb that actually is anadromous! I've caught a fat grown out gold fish miles from the ocean in brackish water, he took bait, so he wasn't stressed, and he was fat.
King mackeral, there is documents of a Scomberoides sp. that has been found way up in the Mekong river. According to Oliver Lucanus which I met many years ago, use to joke about how there was a freshwater "tuna" like fish which is this!
Megalops cyrpinoides and atlanticus - tarpons from Asia and the Atlantic can go far into the rivers.
The list can go on and on., many of the drums, some are brackish, some are fresh and salt.. Many of the tongue fish, soles, and flounders. Most puffers besides the deep reef and open pelagic species venture far into the freshwater. Acanthopagrus, Therapon sp., most of the gobies. many share relatives in the ocean, brackish, and some are landlocked while their cousins have babies that descend into the ocean to complete their life cycle. Many of the aguiliformes, true eels, and some gymnothorax sp. Many of the percadae, like Lates japonicus, calcarifer, lateolabrax, but also the Mandarin perch, like Siniperca. Plotosus, and the other stinging catfish species, many of the pangasius., and Himantura sp. rays. Notesthes robusta - the bullrout, this fish has eluded me my whole life. I need it. All the scats, and monos, and many of the jack trevally. In Hawaii, you can catch 3 species of Jack trevally far into the rivers. All the mullets, and they have shared landlocked ancestors. gudgeons, monos, archers. There are a dozen of species of Aridae sp, like sciades coumas, parkeri to cryptarius truncatus - google this one up, super cool- from South America to Asia that live in freshwater, some can reach 3-4 feet in length.
Remember that most rivers and estuaries, when the tide goes out, it happens once or twice a day the water becomes freshwater, and when the tide comes in, it becomes salt water., so the fish live in between and move up and down between these areas. They do not require a specific gravity or salinity to survive., and the shift is rather quick. Brackish fish are actually some of the most tolerant fish of all!
Part of the fun of fish keeping in being able to crack the code to keeping a certain species and learning about them. There is just so much about science and nature that we just don't understand and it is hard for us to unlearn what we've been told all of our lives, but remember that science is fluid instead of concrete. Once upon a time people did believe that the earth was flat and cutting part of your frontal lobe out was beneficial for mental health. Sorry for the typographical errors, and thank you for listening, happy fish keeping. Share this message!