I am in St. Louis and can ship or meet locally.
I have a small group of Belonasox fry that are now approximately 3 1/2"-4" in size. These guys can eat small-med rosy red minnows from Pet Whatever -Big Box Store.
This is the undisputed King of the livebearers. The fish eat fish and well just fish. The beak like mouth is full of sharp neddle like teeth and once they grab something there is no escape. They use their mouth to turn their food into position to be swollowed whole. They are streamlined ambush hunters with the speed of a missile. Females typically grow to between 8"-9" with males topping out at 4" (+). They are as easy to breed as guppys and the fry are close to 1" at birth. The fish available if fed 3 rosy reds per fish weekly will be big enough for small feeder gold fish in 4-6 weeks. Belonasox are compatable with Convict, Rainbow or Ram cichlids and any other fish they can not swollow. Other than feeding behavior these fish are not aggressive and tend to hang at the top of the tank. One look at a full grown pair and you know this is one heck of a livebearer.


I have a small group of Belonasox fry that are now approximately 3 1/2"-4" in size. These guys can eat small-med rosy red minnows from Pet Whatever -Big Box Store.
This is the undisputed King of the livebearers. The fish eat fish and well just fish. The beak like mouth is full of sharp neddle like teeth and once they grab something there is no escape. They use their mouth to turn their food into position to be swollowed whole. They are streamlined ambush hunters with the speed of a missile. Females typically grow to between 8"-9" with males topping out at 4" (+). They are as easy to breed as guppys and the fry are close to 1" at birth. The fish available if fed 3 rosy reds per fish weekly will be big enough for small feeder gold fish in 4-6 weeks. Belonasox are compatable with Convict, Rainbow or Ram cichlids and any other fish they can not swollow. Other than feeding behavior these fish are not aggressive and tend to hang at the top of the tank. One look at a full grown pair and you know this is one heck of a livebearer.



