#aquariums

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Ah, the glory days before the damn floaters exploded.

Besides us, Best parents ever.

Pelvicachromis Pulcher (Nigerian Red)

current vibe in the low tech rasbora/shrimp tank: chill.

I finally spotted one of the littler blue jelly babies perfectly posing right next to my biggest crystal red for scale, but this video demonstrates one of the many reasons that it’s hard to capture just how baby these baby shrimp are.

i.e. the extremely nosy emerald eye rasbora squad, who have arrived at the conclusion that my presence near the tank = food, and if for some reason I am not immediately giving them food, it is simply because I couldn’t see them before and they had best get my attention. (I literally fed them less than fifteen minutes before I tried to take this video.)

as promised, please witness:

two incredibly tiny baby shrimp

Help! What are these white fleshy lumps on appa?

Sorry I haven’t been active . Since sonny’s passing appa seems like hes not doing well he seem depressed , he’s never been the only fish and I am hesitant to get another one . Want to find a reputable place to get a goldfish from that is not a baby.

My children

Moved the fish tank to a different wall. Big much needed water change and deep scrub of everything . #goldfish #fancygoldfish

Hello, friends! I’m returning from my hiatus to let people know about something very important. As of today, 2/4/2022, HR 4521 along with the COMPETES Act has been passed (mostly along party lines) through the House of Representatives and is making its way to the senate.

This matters to the fish, herp, bird, and invert communities for one big reason: there’s an amendment in Division H from the Committee of Natural Resources that modifies the Lacey Act. According to this amendment, all non-native species would be classified as injurious by default until later review. There would be an import ban on non-native fish, reptiles, amphibians, and the like unless they are reviewed by the Secretary of the Interior and found to not be an “imminent threat to human beings, to the interests of agriculture, horticulture, forestry, or to wildlife or the wildlife resources of the United States.” They must also be verifiably imported or transported between state lines in “more than minimal quantities” in a 1-year period before the COMPETES Act is passed. Those quantities have not been decided yet.

We’re talking a devastating blanket ban on any species that isn’t well-known and studied enough to be proven non-threatening.

Let’s take Parasphromenus, for instance! The licorice gourami. This is a genus of fish from the peat bogs of Indonesia and Malaysia. They will likely be extinct in the wild within our lifetime, because their habitats are being rapidly deforested and converted into palm oil plantations. The key to the licorice gourami’s survival is captive breeding by dedicated aquarists. (Learn more about the Parasphromenus Project here.) Because there are very few of them left in the wild, a very tiny amount of them are being imported or distributed within the US, and you might only see 1 or 2 of a given species being moved around. These would not meet minimal quantities and would be banned. Goodbye, licorice gouramis.

And here we have spiny eels, what got me into fishkeeping. These two, Charlie and Dennis Reyneelds, are my Macrognathus aral, or the striped peacock eel. There are a good 13 different eels classified as peacock eels, and they all get lumped into 4 (usually incorrect) species in the US pet trade. Even with those inflated numbers, not many are being brought into the USA. If you’re extremely lucky, you might find a couple skinny ones hiding in the gravel at Petsmart. Say goodbye to any spiny eel that isn’t the well-known fire eel. (Fire eels do terribly in captivity and need about a 1500+ gallon tank as fully grown adults, but anyways.)

This will affect many, many species that are infrequently imported. At best, they’ll just become in the USA and continuing to sustain populations in the wild. At worst, they will be driven to extinction in the wild and lose their base of conservationists within the USA. Not only is this a hideous overstep of the Lacey Act–we should not have a “whitelist” of non-native organisms that can legally exist in the USA–but it is absolutely disastrous to threatened species being held afloat by passionate individuals. Unless you want the only fish available to be what you could find in an old Walmart fish section, please reach out to your senators. This bill has already passed the House and is moving to a vote in the Senate.

Find out who your senator is (a quick google will do this), go to their Contact page, and send them an email, a message, dial their phone, send them a fax. Whatever you do, get into contact and ask them to please oppose HR 4521′s Presumptive Prohibition on Importation amendment to the Lacey Act. If you want to write a long plea on how it will affect conservation efforts, go for it! But if you aren’t sure what to write, here’s what I sent to mine:

Dear Senator _______,

In regards to the America COMPETES Act, HR 4521, Section 71102 (d): I’m a fishkeeping hobbyist dedicated to preserving species threatened by habitat loss. To do this, I rely on imported specimens of rare endangered fish to create stable populations within captivity. Because these fish have dwindling ranges in the wild, they are sparsely imported, and already near-impossible to find.

According to the amendments proposed to the Lacey Act by the Committee on Natural Resources, these species would be classified by default as injurious and illegal to import or transport across state lines. The exception would be those imported in a to-be-announced “minimum quantity” within 1-year before the passing of the bill. Covid-borne logistics slowdowns meant that importations of fish from 2020 onward have been at an all-time low, as you cannot risk livestock getting stuck in transport and dying. Especially with endangered fish, it defeats the purpose of importation with the intent of preservation.

A “whitelist” is dangerous lip service meant to soothe those worried about invasive species, at the cost of species extinction and ruined conservation efforts. One single entity should not be able to completely prohibit harmless species unless they are known to be a hazard to the US. There are thousands of fish species with no chance of survival outside of aquaria once their wild populations are wiped out by spreading agricultural and development threats. Please, for the sake of wildlife diversity and those of us who strive to preserve it, eliminate the Section 71102 (d) amendment on Presumptive Prohibition to the Lacey Act in HR 4521. The fate of thousands of threatened species depend on it.

happyheidi:

littleAxolotl wishes you a happy day! ♡ x

Percabeth at the aquarium, ft. baby Estelle Blofis. I’m having fun with the chance to put out as muc

Percabeth at the aquarium, ft. baby Estelle Blofis. I’m having fun with the chance to put out as much as possible before school starts again:) Enjoy, babes! Happy New Year!


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Wow!! Hello friends, the Whale Shark Bag KickStarter is fin-ally here after all this time! That’s twWow!! Hello friends, the Whale Shark Bag KickStarter is fin-ally here after all this time! That’s twWow!! Hello friends, the Whale Shark Bag KickStarter is fin-ally here after all this time! That’s twWow!! Hello friends, the Whale Shark Bag KickStarter is fin-ally here after all this time! That’s tw

Wow!! Hello friends, the Whale Shark Bag KickStarter is fin-ally here after all this time! That’s two fin puns in one post. Listen. I’m tired, tumblies.

We have a bunch of great rewards in addition to the bag itself, so be shore to tell your whale shark-loving friends and family, retweet, reblog, shout about it from the mountain tops, throw a secret message bottle into the ocean*, send telepathic signals across the globe… well, you get the idea! Every share is appre-sea-ated. ♡

PLEDGE NOW:http://kck.st/2JM8OFa

If you have twitter, we’ve been posting fun updates there - check it out! @/WhaleSharksKS

(*please do not throw a bottle into the ocean. litter is for losers.)


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picked up some cherry barbs after work today, i’m obsessed with how neon red the males look under this lighting.

Aquarium at the Frost Science Museum #frostscience #museum #museums #aquarium #aquariums #aquatic #c

Aquarium at the Frost Science Museum

#frostscience #museum #museums #aquarium #aquariums #aquatic #cool #awesome #marine #ocean #oceans #sea #seas #animal #animals #fish #fishes #exhibition #exhibit #water #miami #florida #photography #photographer #photo #photos #pics #nofilter #nofilters #nofilterneeded


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Aquaria (Part Three of Three) [Bits & Bobs]Link: SFS [Folder]     Now that the game has been &lsAquaria (Part Three of Three) [Bits & Bobs]Link: SFS [Folder]     Now that the game has been &lsAquaria (Part Three of Three) [Bits & Bobs]Link: SFS [Folder]     Now that the game has been &lsAquaria (Part Three of Three) [Bits & Bobs]Link: SFS [Folder]     Now that the game has been &lsAquaria (Part Three of Three) [Bits & Bobs]Link: SFS [Folder]     Now that the game has been &ls

Aquaria (Part Three of Three) [Bits & Bobs]

Link:SFS [Folder]     

Now that the game has been ‘fixed’ enough that I can stand to enter it for any amount of time, I am FINALLY releasing the remaining parts of my Aquaria Set. I had wanted to include some screenshots of the UI options, but I guess that little detail missed this patch - Oh Well…

Included in this post are the tabletop aquariums that I had done right before the release of Cats & Dogs, as well as the aquarium tables that I made as Base Game alternatives for the one released with MFPS. Those have two different versions - one similar to the MFPS one, with pre-set collections of fish (Custom Tuning), and another that has 11 slots inside with accompanying small 'fishbowl’ rocks that one places inside of the table to be able to place the fish of your choice (No Custom Tuning), as well as both having a full set of slots on top of the table to work with (9 Large & 16 Medium slots). They are both available with 25 swatches - 5 different edges (black, white, dark brown, light brown and 'red lacquer’) as well as having differing choices of interiors (5 each). Place the small rocks for the interior before trying to decorate the tops, as if there is an open slot inside the tank from an un-placed rock slot, the game will want to place any small-slotted item inside.

There are two variations of the Base Game 'extra’ fishbowls, with some of the interior 'clutter’ removed and re-colored. They also stack, as well as the coffee tables, just in case you want to conserve space while trying to complete the Fishing aspiration with its requirement of mounting or bowling fish.

I took the EP01 Lab Tube, widened it, and added two extra slots into the interior, that has an accompanying tiny geode to use for the 'aquarium’ part of it (EP01 required for both). I didn’t worry (read: bother) with making an interior water effect for the tube itself. Shown above with the three geodes fully stocked.

Lastly, to round out the release, are some select items from Sulani’s seas for larger aquaria. All base game compatible, I took one of the coral reefs and re-sized it to what I felt looked right for this purpose, then added 10 slots onto it for placement of the additional items that act as aquariums. Those are (as shown above): a coral branch, a sponge lump, the sponge tubes, and the starfish all with 5 swatches each. They act as regular aquariums when clicked on - just choose 'Open’ to begin adding the fish of your choice. Each holds 6 fish, and as with the previous Aquaria rocks, all are somewhat varied with the placement of the fish for maximum 'random’ effect. (It is Best to be 'inside’ of the Aquaria to be able to use the options for fish placement) (there’s also a wall starfish as a bonus)

I may at some 'near’ date release some of my variations of Default Replacement fishing spot signs and some new ponds for lots. Maybe…

Part One of the Set: HERE     
Part Two of the Set: HERE     

Cheers All!


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#NandankananZoologicalPark is a 1,080-acre zoo and botanical garden in #Bhubaneswar, #Odisha, India.

#NandankananZoologicalPark is a 1,080-acre zoo and botanical garden in #Bhubaneswar, #Odisha, India. Established in 1960, it was opened to the public in 1979 and became the first zoo in India to join World Association of #Zoos and #Aquariums (WAZA) in 2009. It also contains a #BotanicalGarden and part of it has been declared a #sanctuary. #Nandankanan, literally meaning The #Garden of Heaven, is located near the capital city, Bhubaneswar, in the environs of the #ChandakaForest, and includes the 134-acre #KanjiaLake.
https://www.instagram.com/p/CcZU6obPnUD/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=


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