Hey everyone. Recently I have been contacted by several members with questions regarding keeping sharks.
The truth is a 180, 210, or even 240 are not acceptable sized tanks for housing these sharks.
Usually the situation involves someone with prior reef experience who thinks because they are going from a 50g to a 180g tank, that its "huge" and a perfect home for a small shark. I felt this way when I went from a 20L to a 120g.
Lets be honest......
A banded catshark can reach sexual maturity in 18 months!
People try to slow the growth of these sharks by feeding less. (this is something that USUALLY does not happen)
Everytime you have a vistor, you'll wanna show off the shark and feed him right? I've been there. Its not exciting to feed these sharks only once to twice a week. They tend to be very inactive so keepers are always trying to temp the shark with ANOTHER meal. Get him off the sand bed and moving, ya know? (don't forget that if you reduce the frequency of feedings, you have to add vitamins to the food!)
Next! People often say "well I'll put the shark in my small tank I have now, but will upgrade to a larger system when he gets bigger"
A four foot adult banded catshark needs at LEAST a four foot wide tank to turn around. Honestly it needs 5 feet!
With that being said, my shark tank complete system which I had custom built and designed for sharks was $18,000. The demensions were 11ft long and 5ft wide.
So, with that being said, if you want a banded catshark you should either wait until you have a sutable enviroment to house the shark, or have 10 to 20 thousand dollars set aside to house the shark as an adult. (in as little as 18 months)
So here it is! This video is of an ADULT banded catshark. THIS IS NOT A NURSE!
This is an 18 month old banded catshark in a 210g at a store close to my home. Minimal rock with a footprint of 6'x2'x30".
YOUTUBE LINK ---->YouTube - Banded catshark
Truely sad if you ask me.......
.
The truth is a 180, 210, or even 240 are not acceptable sized tanks for housing these sharks.
Usually the situation involves someone with prior reef experience who thinks because they are going from a 50g to a 180g tank, that its "huge" and a perfect home for a small shark. I felt this way when I went from a 20L to a 120g.
Lets be honest......
A banded catshark can reach sexual maturity in 18 months!
People try to slow the growth of these sharks by feeding less. (this is something that USUALLY does not happen)
Everytime you have a vistor, you'll wanna show off the shark and feed him right? I've been there. Its not exciting to feed these sharks only once to twice a week. They tend to be very inactive so keepers are always trying to temp the shark with ANOTHER meal. Get him off the sand bed and moving, ya know? (don't forget that if you reduce the frequency of feedings, you have to add vitamins to the food!)
Next! People often say "well I'll put the shark in my small tank I have now, but will upgrade to a larger system when he gets bigger"
A four foot adult banded catshark needs at LEAST a four foot wide tank to turn around. Honestly it needs 5 feet!
With that being said, my shark tank complete system which I had custom built and designed for sharks was $18,000. The demensions were 11ft long and 5ft wide.
So, with that being said, if you want a banded catshark you should either wait until you have a sutable enviroment to house the shark, or have 10 to 20 thousand dollars set aside to house the shark as an adult. (in as little as 18 months)
So here it is! This video is of an ADULT banded catshark. THIS IS NOT A NURSE!
This is an 18 month old banded catshark in a 210g at a store close to my home. Minimal rock with a footprint of 6'x2'x30".
YOUTUBE LINK ---->YouTube - Banded catshark
Truely sad if you ask me.......
.
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