can i keep arowana in this aquarium

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
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Hawkfish3.0;1748631; said:
I"m gonna keep a silver in a shoebox, duh! When it gets bigger, I'm gonna move it to my bathtub, duh, and then I can swim with it!

watch out for ur ass, they tend to bite duh
 
From CICL:
from what i've seen on tyhis forum, all ur silvers are from america, and caught in the wild. i've even seen ppl buying baby silvers with their egg sack -.-'' all my aros come from asia, mainly malaysia. that's y their silvers are hybrid, they are not caught in rivers or wild -.-'' duh. they have been genetaically modified to be more resistant and colourful. n yeah its not from crappy farms where they breed all kinds of fishes but specialising in aros -.-'' duh dude inform urself a bit



BTW, selective breeding, as is used in these aro breeding facilities, is not genetic modification.
 
CICL;1748343; said:
or maybe ur too ignorant that u dont know there's gold or red pearl aro, jardinii? that's y u keep on breeding normal ones? duh or ur too noob to raise one?

This thread has nothing to do with Scleropages sp. australo-asian aros. Why bring them up?
 
this thread is aching for a lockdown :lock:
 
I read this thread, and I must say GET M ODDBALL!!!!!!!!

Hey CICL, you sound like a 15 year old petsmart employee that has rectal cranial inversion. Talking about noobs like you're not one? How long have you been keeping fish? Drop TAIL? ROFLMFAO!
 
:lock:Just so this kid can't give any more bad advice.
 
Technically Odd, selective breeding is still considered genetic modification, it's just a "natural" way of doing it that doesn't involve any advanced scientific methods like micro biology or gene splicing.

Did you know that the corn we eat today was actually genetically modified from a ditch weed that originated in northern Mexico through selective breeding (pollination)?
 
Hawkfish3.0;1748899; said:
Technically Odd, selective breeding is still considered genetic modification, it's just a "natural" way of doing it that doesn't involve any advanced scientific methods like micro biology or gene splicing.

Did you know that the corn we eat today was actually genetically modified from a ditch weed that originated in northern Mexico through selective breeding (pollination)?

Genetic modification: The alteration to an organism's genome by any number of methods, including inserting, transferring, or deleting genes or other DNA sequences.

Allowing fish to pair up in a captive environment is still a form of natural selection. Egg stripping/milt harvesting is a form of artificial reproduction.
 
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