Yellow tail spiny eel

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sackking67

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Apr 25, 2012
201
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florida
My LFS has these in stock and I have never kept eels before. So simple questions like what do they eat, will they hide the whole time, can he be kept with a frontosa, and if any one has personal story's or pictures. Thanks


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could you get a pic?
 
For size: 8" is consider large, 10" would be freakish, 12" would be a monster for a yellow tail. 18" in wild, average is 6" in an aquarium. Spiny eels will forage for food, but most often will accept worms. A feeding tip (since they are nocturnal) is to take a small plastic cup (like diners give you for salad dressing) and fill the bottom with blood worms and cover the worms in gravel, put the cup in the aquarium before the lights go out. The gravel will keep most of the fish away, and the eel should find them. They can be VERY tough to get to eat once introduced...I've heard stories of eel fasts lasting over a month before eating. I have a tire track that's about 8" - 10" and he loves earthworms (chopped). The smaller eels are considered delicate in comparison with the larger varieties (yellow tail is a smaller variety). They can be tough to get established but once they do they usually are good to go and quite hardy. They will hide, a lot. Most fish keepers think they've lost them for weeks, months, days...until they pop up...usually in a filter. They are expert escape artists so water level and tank lids are important. They hide in the substrate and/or tunnels...usually adding PVC piping creates a "home" for them...lots of spaces for them to hide will lead to them being more active, or at least visable. I've seen some gregarious eels, but most are shy. The Frontosa might consider the eel a meal if he is large, possibly thinking he's a worm! A large frontosa will easily consume a small eel. My tire track lives in a tipped over tiki head in my tank, I'll try and remember to grab some photos...always has his head out, will eat from my hand and is actually pretty tolerant of my interactions with him and the other fish. The larger ones can be hand-tamed (tire track/fire eels) but I have yet to see the smaller varieties act in this mannor. I would recommend tracking down a tire track or fire eel if you want something outgoing and not just background noise (preferably at a larger size...6-8")...beware though, they get quite large...just youtube "large tire track eel" or "large fire eel" to see what I'm talking about...they are a hoot once they hit 2 foot. They can be quite greedy!
 
For size: 8" is consider large, 10" would be freakish, 12" would be a monster for a yellow tail. 18" in wild, average is 6" in an aquarium. Spiny eels will forage for food, but most often will accept worms. A feeding tip (since they are nocturnal) is to take a small plastic cup (like diners give you for salad dressing) and fill the bottom with blood worms and cover the worms in gravel, put the cup in the aquarium before the lights go out. The gravel will keep most of the fish away, and the eel should find them. They can be VERY tough to get to eat once introduced...I've heard stories of eel fasts lasting over a month before eating. I have a tire track that's about 8" - 10" and he loves earthworms (chopped). The smaller eels are considered delicate in comparison with the larger varieties (yellow tail is a smaller variety). They can be tough to get established but once they do they usually are good to go and quite hardy. They will hide, a lot. Most fish keepers think they've lost them for weeks, months, days...until they pop up...usually in a filter. They are expert escape artists so water level and tank lids are important. They hide in the substrate and/or tunnels...usually adding PVC piping creates a "home" for them...lots of spaces for them to hide will lead to them being more active, or at least visable. I've seen some gregarious eels, but most are shy. The Frontosa might consider the eel a meal if he is large, possibly thinking he's a worm! A large frontosa will easily consume a small eel. My tire track lives in a tipped over tiki head in my tank, I'll try and remember to grab some photos...always has his head out, will eat from my hand and is actually pretty tolerant of my interactions with him and the other fish. The larger ones can be hand-tamed (tire track/fire eels) but I have yet to see the smaller varieties act in this mannor. I would recommend tracking down a tire track or fire eel if you want something outgoing and not just background noise (preferably at a larger size...6-8")...beware though, they get quite large...just youtube "large tire track eel" or "large fire eel" to see what I'm talking about...they are a hoot once they hit 2 foot. They can be quite greedy!

hey do you think you could help with my eel idk what type it is http://www.monsterfishkeepers.com/forums/showthread.php?495890-My-new-eel-75-gal-ID if you just help ID it would be a tremendous help
 
For size: 8" is consider large, 10" would be freakish, 12" would be a monster for a yellow tail. 18" in wild, average is 6" in an aquarium. Spiny eels will forage for food, but most often will accept worms. A feeding tip (since they are nocturnal) is to take a small plastic cup (like diners give you for salad dressing) and fill the bottom with blood worms and cover the worms in gravel, put the cup in the aquarium before the lights go out. The gravel will keep most of the fish away, and the eel should find them. They can be VERY tough to get to eat once introduced...I've heard stories of eel fasts lasting over a month before eating. I have a tire track that's about 8" - 10" and he loves earthworms (chopped). The smaller eels are considered delicate in comparison with the larger varieties (yellow tail is a smaller variety). They can be tough to get established but once they do they usually are good to go and quite hardy. They will hide, a lot. Most fish keepers think they've lost them for weeks, months, days...until they pop up...usually in a filter. They are expert escape artists so water level and tank lids are important. They hide in the substrate and/or tunnels...usually adding PVC piping creates a "home" for them...lots of spaces for them to hide will lead to them being more active, or at least visable. I've seen some gregarious eels, but most are shy. The Frontosa might consider the eel a meal if he is large, possibly thinking he's a worm! A large frontosa will easily consume a small eel. My tire track lives in a tipped over tiki head in my tank, I'll try and remember to grab some photos...always has his head out, will eat from my hand and is actually pretty tolerant of my interactions with him and the other fish. The larger ones can be hand-tamed (tire track/fire eels) but I have yet to see the smaller varieties act in this mannor. I would recommend tracking down a tire track or fire eel if you want something outgoing and not just background noise (preferably at a larger size...6-8")...beware though, they get quite large...just youtube "large tire track eel" or "large fire eel" to see what I'm talking about...they are a hoot once they hit 2 foot. They can be quite greedy!

Thank u very much. And would a tire track or fire eel be able to live in a 75 g for life and thank u again


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Thank u very much. And would a tire track or fire eel be able to live in a 75 g for life and thank u again


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in my honest opinion...Maaaaaybe not "for life", since they can hit 36" (3 feet) in aquariums, but I would say for a good portion of his life...they are fairly slow growing once they get above a foot. If you purchase him at say...6"? you could easily house him in a 75 for a good many years. I've attached a photo from google of some guy catching one that's a pretty decent size, this should let you know what you should expect size wise for him as an adult.
spinyeelcatch.jpg

spinyeelcatch.jpg
 
in my honest opinion...Maaaaaybe not "for life", since they can hit 36" (3 feet) in aquariums, but I would say for a good portion of his life...they are fairly slow growing once they get above a foot. If you purchase him at say...6"? you could easily house him in a 75 for a good many years. I've attached a photo from google of some guy catching one that's a pretty decent size, this should let you know what you should expect size wise for him as an adult.
View attachment 817993

Thanks again and that is one gorgeous eel


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