• Name:

    Astronotus crassipinnis

    (View AKA's)
  • Family: Cichlidae
  • Species: Oscars
  • Scientific Name: Astronotus crassipinnis
More Details

Also Know As:

| Wild Oscar Araguaia

General info about Astronotus crassipinnis

The word crassipinnis is latin and can be translated to fat fish. These fish are black and have vertical stripes, they can reach 9.44 inches in length. To keep these fish in captivity, water pH should be between 6.5 and 6.9 and water temperature should range from 70ºF to 83ºF. The tank should have floating plants , hiding places and mangrove roots. They can be highly aggressive and very territorial so they can only be kept in community aquariums with fish of the same size.

Astronotus crassipinnis Diet & Nutrition

This species is carnivorous. They can be fed with dried foods, crayfish, worms and insects.

Astronotus crassipinnis Origin

This species has been recorded in Rio Paraguay, Villa Maria, Rio Negro and the Bolivian parts of the Amazon.

Acclimating Astronotus crassipinnis

The water in which these fish are packaged is different from the water in the tank, since these fish are extremely sensitive to water conditions the acclimation process is very important. This process should never be rushed. Aquarium lights should be off for at least the first 4 hours of the fish in the new tank and it should not be fed in the first 24h. There are two acclimation methods: Floating Method and the Drip Method.

Floating method -  the aquarium lights should be off and lights in the room should be dim, the bag in which the fish is should be placed in the surface of the water to float for about 15 minutes, this allows the water in the bag to adjust to the water in the tank. The bag should then be cut under the knot and the top edge of the bag should be rolled down one inch, then ¼ cup of the aquarium water should be added to the bag, this step should be repeated every 4 minutes until the bag is full, then half the water of the bag should be discarded and the bag should be put to float again and ¼ cup of the aquarium water should be added to the bag every 4 minutes until the bag is full. Afterwards, the Discus can be moved into the aquarium.

Drip method – the aquarium lights should be off and lights in the room should be dim, the bag in which the fish is should be placed in the surface of the water to float for about 15 minutes, this allows the water in the bag to adjust to the water in the tank. The bag contents should be poured into a 1 gallon bucket that has never been cleaned with any chemicals, the fish should be enterally submerged. A siphon, using airline tubing, should be set up and a drip line should run from the main aquarium to the bucket. Several loose knots should be tied in the airline tubing to regulate flow. Sucking the end of the airline tube that goes to the bucket will begin a siphon, the flow should be regulated to 2 to 4 drips per second. Once the water in the buckets doubles, half should be discarded and the process should be repeated until it doubles again. Afterwards, the fish can be moved to the aquarium.

Relevent Articles

Original Detail

Name Species Family Scientific Name More Detail Added by
Astronotus crassipinnis Oscars Cichlidae Astronotus crassipinnis

The word crassipinnis is latin and can be translated to fat fish. These fish are black and have vertical stripes, they can reach 9.44 inches in length. To keep these fish in captivity, water pH should be between 6.5 and 6.9 and water temperature should range from 70ºF to 83ºF. The tank should have floating plants , hiding places and mangrove roots. They can be highly aggressive and very territorial so they can only be kept in community aquariums with fish of the same size.

Gokhan MERMERTAS

Changed by users

Submitted Date Submitted By Status Action
2020-07-29 05:22:43 PalaciosAn Approved View
2019-11-03 04:15:46 PalaciosAn Approved View