Stashly
Listing

Emperor snakehead

Listed 6 months agoAvailability · x 1Trade Seller
Asking price£85Size8 inch

Description

Channa marulioides – Emperor Snakehead

Delivery available across UK and Scotland

SourceWhatsApp Chat - Top Stingrays Uk
Emperor snakehead
Emperor snakehead (1)

Emperor snakehead (1)

Sales History by Region. Price trends and recent sales across different markets(prices in £)

Markets

1

Trade Sales

1

Hobbyist Sales

0

This Month

1

Trade

Breeders & shops

Hobbyist

Private collectors

Confirmed

Marked as sold

Listing

Price listed, not sold

TradeMin: £85Max: £85

Members Looking for Emperor snakehead

0 members interested across 0 countries

0 Verified
Filter:

0

Interested

0

Countries

0

Avg Rating

Select members to contact

No members found

No one has added this to their looking for list yet.

Species Reference
Emperor snakeheadView Species

Yellow Emperor Snakehead Channa Maruliodes

  • Care Level: Moderate
  • Tank Size: 88 Gal (400 Ltr) min
  • Temperament: Aggressive
  • PH: 6 – 8
  • Temperature: 22-28°C (72-82°F)
  • Flow: Moderate

What We Like About This Fish:

  • Beautiful Markings That Are One of a Kind to Each Fish
  • Stunning Colouration
  • Impressive, but manageable size

Emperor Snakehead (Channa maruliodes) It is native to Sumatra and Kalimantan, Indonesia. Adult individual has the typical yellow colour body with some black spotted scales. Maruliodes comes in its own unique pattern of bands and flowers, like a fingerprint.

They get their name mainly from the fact that their heads have a snake-like appearance, but it may also have something to do with their sharp teeth. They are one of the few social species of the Channidae family and as juveniles they will swim together in schools as well as hunt together when mature. 

Snakeheads have an accessory respiratory organ, which allows them to breathe outside of the water for a long time.

Snakeheads will need a strong, tight-fitting lid on their aquarium as they will sometimes jump or get carried away while hunting live fish. 

Species specific aquariums are recommended as they are highly predatory and aggressive; although they can coexist with a few of the largest cichlids (Gars are usually a safe bet), large catfish, and various large Plecos. Tank mates should be chosen carefully and should comparable in size as adults.

Snakeheads are ferocious, predatory carnivores and mainly eat massive amounts of live fish, but also eat frogs, insects and crayfish in the wild. In the aquarium they should be fed a constant supply of live fish, but they will also accept live earth worms, frogs, crickets, and dry foods.