5-15 years generally
Red belly pacus are the same thing as a black pacu and it all depends on how your pacus act.
24 inches bro
There is a red belly piranha which eats meat and also a pacu which eat plant and veggie and which is a type of piranha
A red belly Pacu is a relative of a piranha and it looks like a piranha. It doesn't have sharp teeth and it isn't aggressive. It is an omnivore. It usually has orange on its underside or belly, and a gray-black color on the rest of its body.
both pacu and piranha eat live meat and they both can have red bellies too. the real difference is between their jaws, nose and teeth. piranha has a produting lower jaw while pacu has a round mouth. pacu's nose is button shaped but piranha's nose is unmistakable. and piranhas have much larger teeth than pacus.
Actually the Oscar won't fight. I had a red-belled pacu in a tank with an Oscar and I came home one day and the pacu had eaten the Oscar and a kissing fish and a parrot fish. They aren't suppose to eat fish their size but I think mine taps more into the nature of his piranha cousins than most. If you get both just be careful and make sure the Oscar is bigger and dominant. On the contrary every Oscar and every pacu has different personalities. Some will fight some will not. I have an Oscar in a 1500 gallon tank that hates pacu. And I've got a pacu that hates Oscars... So you never know...
The normal water temperature for red belly pacu fish is typically between 72-82 degrees Fahrenheit (22-28 degrees Celsius). It is important to maintain a stable temperature within this range to ensure the health and well-being of the fish.
Yes, they are from the same family, but i dont know if Red Belly Pacus can be kept with Black Belly Piranhas. Red belly Pacus can be kept with Red belly piranhas.
They are eaten every day in South America. So the answer is yes.
Usually a week but it'll get red anytime you hit it or get it infected.
The red belly black snake can grow up to 3 metres.
they live in rivers in miami and in south bend and chicogo and hiding in rocks red ear sliders live in water