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  • #16
    there are teams from different research institutions that survey, study, collect, and destroy exotic and invasive species. there are organized and well funded methods of reporting for other invasive species... the native wildlife is already at risk.
    my fish house:
    2.5g- ramshorn hatchery
    6g eclipse- yellow shrimp, chili rasboras, yellow apple snails
    29g- geo grow-out, angels, 12"fire eel, dwarf frog, apple snails
    45g- jade sleeper gobies, native killifish, feeder endlers

    75g-
    2 oscars, parrot, silver dollars, albino channel cat, syno euptera, bichir, baby jaguar, convicts, yabby
    125g- fahaka puffer, rainbow shark
    and about a dozen bettas....

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    • #17
      Originally posted by allysangels View Post
      there are teams from different research institutions that survey, study, collect, and destroy exotic and invasive species. there are organized and well funded methods of reporting for other invasive species... the native wildlife is already at risk.
      http://www.texasinvasives.org/
      Wow! That's a neat site there! I knew there were quite a bit of invasive species in our waters but didn't think there were insects and plants too

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      • #18
        and theres this video
        my fish house:
        2.5g- ramshorn hatchery
        6g eclipse- yellow shrimp, chili rasboras, yellow apple snails
        29g- geo grow-out, angels, 12"fire eel, dwarf frog, apple snails
        45g- jade sleeper gobies, native killifish, feeder endlers

        75g-
        2 oscars, parrot, silver dollars, albino channel cat, syno euptera, bichir, baby jaguar, convicts, yabby
        125g- fahaka puffer, rainbow shark
        and about a dozen bettas....

        Comment

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