Sharkbait74
New member
I have a 2ft thick-girthed Snowflake Eel who is fed 2-3 times a week on alternating foods (tiger prawn, scallops, clams, krill, squid). This is kind of a new situation for me since I have never had a fish perish in my 14month setup of this 200g FOWLR tank.
My question is, how can you determine if a fish naturally perishes and is simply being scavenged by the Snowflake eel vs when do you know your Snowflake is starting to kill off your stock??
My stocking list:
6" Bannerfish
4" Bannerfish
5.5" Harlequin Tuskfish
5.5" Magnificent Foxface
4" Longnose Hawkfish
I've had my Bannerfish in the tank since May along with the Snowflake. The Snowflake would always shy away from them... the Bannerfish were so bold... would swim through his lair, would steal food bits from his mouth. If anything, it appeared the eel was afraid of them... one spooked him into jumping out of the tank while I was feeding them.
Anyhow, Oct 21st I am missing my 4" Bannerfish. Found the bones picked clean 3 days later. Oct 26th I am missing my 6" Bannerfish and i can see the carcass in the eel's lair.
My otherfish keep a distance from the eel but most certainly don't shy away from the entrances to his lair.
It would be easy to say the eel killed them, but really... if the fish perished from other causes, I would suspect the eel would scavenge on the carcass bringing it into his lair. My question, what are ways to determine an eel attack vs eel scavenging on an already dead fish? Have any of you had fish perish within an eel tank?
I would've had to have torn apart half my tank moving large tonga rock pieces and severely pi$$ing off my eel to take a good look at the fish carcass... then again, if the eel was scavenging on it, it would obviously have bite marks or tares anyhow?
Any thoughts or suggestions? I've heard of Zebra's and Snowflake's becoming bitesize fish eaters.... but an aggressive 6" Bannerfish is hardly bitesize. Furthermore, I did have a small 3" RoyalDottyback perish within the tank... the body was left alone on the sandbed, although it could've been there for as little as a few minutes up to 18hrs... who knows.
Comments and opinions appreciated. What's the largest fish you've experienced a Snowflake killing with 100% certainty?
My question is, how can you determine if a fish naturally perishes and is simply being scavenged by the Snowflake eel vs when do you know your Snowflake is starting to kill off your stock??
My stocking list:
6" Bannerfish
4" Bannerfish
5.5" Harlequin Tuskfish
5.5" Magnificent Foxface
4" Longnose Hawkfish
I've had my Bannerfish in the tank since May along with the Snowflake. The Snowflake would always shy away from them... the Bannerfish were so bold... would swim through his lair, would steal food bits from his mouth. If anything, it appeared the eel was afraid of them... one spooked him into jumping out of the tank while I was feeding them.
Anyhow, Oct 21st I am missing my 4" Bannerfish. Found the bones picked clean 3 days later. Oct 26th I am missing my 6" Bannerfish and i can see the carcass in the eel's lair.
My otherfish keep a distance from the eel but most certainly don't shy away from the entrances to his lair.
It would be easy to say the eel killed them, but really... if the fish perished from other causes, I would suspect the eel would scavenge on the carcass bringing it into his lair. My question, what are ways to determine an eel attack vs eel scavenging on an already dead fish? Have any of you had fish perish within an eel tank?
I would've had to have torn apart half my tank moving large tonga rock pieces and severely pi$$ing off my eel to take a good look at the fish carcass... then again, if the eel was scavenging on it, it would obviously have bite marks or tares anyhow?
Any thoughts or suggestions? I've heard of Zebra's and Snowflake's becoming bitesize fish eaters.... but an aggressive 6" Bannerfish is hardly bitesize. Furthermore, I did have a small 3" RoyalDottyback perish within the tank... the body was left alone on the sandbed, although it could've been there for as little as a few minutes up to 18hrs... who knows.
Comments and opinions appreciated. What's the largest fish you've experienced a Snowflake killing with 100% certainty?