Carnivorous Fish

Awesome Guy

AC Members
Aug 25, 2003
6
0
0
43
Ontario Canada
Visit site
Ok, I'm not exactly a newbie, but I have been out of the game for a couple of years. My last tank was a 10Gal. of Fancy Guppies, and a spotted pleco.

I have decided after my family and I move to the new house, I would like to set up a carnivorous tank.

What kind of fish should I get? I want something that will be really fun to watch as it eats its live prey, and other food varieties.

I want to experience the whole feeding frenzy.

I plan on getting whatever size tank is suitable for whatever fish, I will only be using the 10G for feeder stock.

Thanks

A.G.
 
Feeding frenzy

I would think that any live food would turn even guppies into piranahs.

I fed frozen daphnia to my tiny ember tetras, what a madhouse! I can only imagine if they were alive not defrosted.
 
What would you be using as food? Oscars are frequently and erroneously fed goldfish, a very poor source of nutrition. The other factor is of course the size of tank you'll be setting up. There are several interesting predators available, but most will require a larger tank. For anything less than a 75, I would go with some of the lurking predators like leaf fish, or the african butterfly. Both are beautifully colored to resemble floating woods debris, and lurk at the surface. The leaf fish has an extendable mouth piece (very much like you see in Aliens ), and sucks down fish voraciously. The african butterfly is amazing to watch feed--it eats insect and small fish much larger than you'd think it could.

Both fish would appreciate some floating debris--either wood or plants, and could be kept with a variety of fish, as long as they were larger than a neon.

Piranha are illegal in many states, and they tend to be disappointing. Singly or in very small groups, they are shy and territorial. They will not display the feeding frenzy behavior made famous in movies.

You may be interested in visiting predatoryfish.net
 
I'm just going by what I've read, by the Siamese Tigerfish seems like it is a very interesting predator.
 
if you are willing to go up to say a 75 i would recommend a jaguar cichlid.

I think a solitary firemouth *could* be housed in a 29 but they are not really predators. (someone please correct me here if i am wrong)
 
AquariaCentral.com