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hi i need info on archer fish waht is the min tank size can they live in a 30 gal?? i don't know anything on these fish or brackish water fish so any other info would help
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Most specimens from South East Asia come from brackish water, but note that several archers, including populations of Toxotes chatereus
hi i need info on archer fish waht is the min tank size can they live in a 30 gal?? i don't know anything on these fish or brackish water fish so any other info would help
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Actually Toxotes Chatereus is a brackish water species. Often times Archerfish will be found in freshwater but not over the course of their entire lives. Freshwater can be acceptable when they're juvenilles but with age they will require a higher SG (however not always the case). I believe you're confusing Toxotes Chartereus with another member of the Toxotidae family which lives it's entire life in full freshwater. I believe it is the only true freshwater archerfish and is not avaliable in the fish trade.
Hi Dave,
Nope, I'm not confusing Toxotes chatereus with anything.
All the South East Asian stock of this species is, indeed, brackish water (as I state in the Brackish FAQ, hence the link). However, I am reliably informed that there are specific Australian populations of this species that are strictly confined to freshwater (again, in the FAQ). These are not traded commercially outside of Australia.
There are two or three other strictly freshwater Toxotes, Toxotes lorentzi, Toxotes oligolepis, and an as-yet unnamed species from the Fitzroy River in Australia. There may be others, but these are the ones I know about.
I've kept Toxotes chatereus and Toxotes jaculatrix and found frozen prawns to be a cheap and readily accepted staple. I got mine to spit by squishing bits of prawn on the glass of the tank above the water line. By doing this just above the water, the fish smell the juices and see the food, and begin by sticking their snouts out to snap up the food. Repeat, raising the bits of prawn higher and higher. They first jump up at the food, but onces it's about half to 2/3rds the body length above the water, they start spitting. Very cool.
It's also worth mentioning that these fish will eat any fish they can fit in their (surprisingly large) mouths.
Regards,
Neale
Actually Toxotes Chatereus is a brackish water species. Often times Archerfish will be found in freshwater but not over the course of their entire lives. Freshwater can be acceptable when they're juvenilles but with age they will require a higher SG (however not always the case). I believe you're confusing Toxotes Chartereus with another member of the Toxotidae family which lives it's entire life in full freshwater. I believe it is the only true freshwater archerfish and is not avaliable in the fish trade.
Hi David,
Since the freshwater T. chatereus aren't traded, mentioning them is probably information overkill, but still, some people (fish geeks, like me) find this sort of thing interesting.
Like CFC, I have seen colour changes in these fish, and consider it to be no less 'normal' than the same thing in cichlids. Of course if one fish in a group consistently shows non-standard colours, e.g., is completely dark, then you might want to consider that in relation to its behaviour in other regards. Is it feeding properly? Is there sign of aggression within the group?
Archers supposedly have luminous patches on the flanks that help keep the group together in murky water. I can't swear that I've really noticed them. Possibly without the right diet this luminosity fades.
I've looked after archers for several years while at university, and found them to be highly aggressive within the group. As CFC says, they need space, and frankly they seem to be loners when mature. But in the wild they certainly are schooling fish, and there used to a big group of adults at Kew Gardens in one of the tropical pools. It was very cool watching them play 'follow the leader' -- they swam in a long line rather than a clump. This leads me to believe that they are intensely hierarchical, with a definite dominant fish leading the pack and choosing where they go. In fish tanks, unless you have a lot of space, this probably doesn't work out well, with the "alpha fish" bullying the smaller/weaker fish. Unless you have a really big tank, I'd tend to recommend just keeping a single archer.
Incidentally, archers are known to feed off the bottom, and have been observed using their "jet" to clear away sand to uncover worms and things. But the ones I took care of were so easy to feed, it wasn't an issue. Kept with scats and monos, not much food gets leftover anyway!
One cool thing was watching a scat learn how the archerfish fed. It would follow the archer and take position behind it. The archer would spit down the bit of prawn I'd put on the glass, and at the same moment the scat would zip forwards and steal the food. The scat in question was a Selenotoca sp., a really handsome fish that sort of has the reverse colours to the archer. This archer also happily ate trout pellets and 'Cichlid Gold' pellets. We also gave all these big, brackish water fish bits of squid and mackerel from time to time; messy, but they loved it!
Cheers,
Neale