Blue eye panaque - this beast is about 12". When I receive this fish, it was only at 10". For some reason, it was the fastest growing BEP I ever have.
L90 papa panaque - about 7"-8".
L226 tiger panaque - 3.5"-4".
Nice and fat female ready to spawn.
A prime example of how hairy a male can be. It was hiding underneath a piece of mopani wood. All the debris got stuck on its hairy body.
Tatia intermedia - a type of driftwood catfish. Very active during feeding. Some of you have seen this tank. When you first look at the tank, you might only notice there are only 3-4 fish in there. By the time you throw in some food, you will see a feeding fenzy. Quite an unique pattern on the body as well.
Stingray - yepezi - last female I have. She is about 7"+. Very active and feeding all the time. Just look at her tail. Quite an unique stingray as Yepezi doesn't export often. And they stay quite small under 16".
Stingray - Peruvian marble or aparico. She is about 10"-11".
Anaconda swamp eel (Simbranchus marmoratus) - 12". When I was have this little one, it was only 6" and about the thickness of half of a pencil. Now it doubles its length and about twice the thickness of a pencil. Quite fun to handle it with your hand as well. It will wriggle and stay in between your fingers.
Aequidens diadema sp. red - 2.5"-3". A relative of the common keyhole cichlids but with more color. Very active fish, stays relatively smaller (max at 4"), and quite community with other smaller fish (just don't put any neon tetra or similar size tetra with them) but other dwarf cichlids like ram, bleeding heart, cory, are perfectly fine.
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