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Encyclopaedia
Spotted Gar
Lepisosteus oculatus
The Armored Alligator-Fish of North America (60-80 cm / 2.5 feet). A literal, air-breathing living fossil from the Jurassic era, featuring an incredibly long, tooth-studded beak and a completely rigid, unbendable body wrapped in diamond-hard enamel scales. It is an ambush predator that hovers motionlessly like a floating stick. Crucially, it is a TEMPERATE (cooler water) fish, totally inappropriate for hot, tropical 'Monster Tanks'. It requires giant, unheated enclosures and strict training to accept dead, meaty foods.
- Family
- Lepisosteidae
- Origin
- Nord America (Bacino del Mississippi, Golfo del Messico)
- Tank use
- Used in 0 tanks
12 °C - 25 °C
7 - 8
Freshwater
Surface
112 cm
Description
Geographic Origin and Biotope: Broadly native to the clear, slow-moving, heavily vegetated rivers, swamps, and brackish coastal estuaries stretching from the Mississippi River basin down to the Gulf of Mexico. They are incredibly tough survivors: they thrive in unheated, temperate waters that get cold in the winter, and their highly vascularized swim bladders allow them to comfortably gulp air and survive in stagnant, suffocating summer swamps.
Taxonomy and Morphology: The Enamel Armored Torpedo (Lepisosteidae). It is a heavily ossified, tubular monster. It lacks flexible, overlapping scales; instead, it is shrink-wrapped in 'Ganoid' scales—interlocking, diamond-shaped plates covered in dentine and enamel, making the fish feel like solid concrete to the touch. The iconic feature is the 'Rostrum': a long, slender, beak-like snout packed with rows of needle-sharp teeth. With its fins pushed to the absolute rear of its body, it acts as a loaded biological spring, capable of blindingly fast forward lunges.
Social Behavior: The Floating Log. It is the ultimate stealth ambush predator. It spends nearly its entire life hovering completely motionless at the surface or suspended perfectly still among tall reeds. It is so patient that algae often grows on wild specimens. It never chases prey. When a fish wanders too close, the Gar violently whips its head sideways, impaling the prey on its needle teeth, then slowly manipulates the fish to swallow it head-first. They are surprisingly docile and indifferent to fish too large to swallow.
Coloration and Sexual Dimorphism: The Camouflaged Hunter. The base color ranges from dark olive, earthy brown, to slate green, fading to a creamy white belly. What distinguishes the Spotted Gar from other gars is the intense, dark-brown or ink-black 'spots' completely covering its head, beak, body, and fins, breaking up its outline perfectly in dappled sunlight among the reeds. Males and females are completely identical, though females reach slightly larger, thicker maximum sizes.
Care and observations
Tank Setup: The Giant Cold-Water Enclosure. Due to their totally rigid, unbendable armor, they literally cannot turn around in narrow tanks. An adult requires an absolute minimum of 200 cm long and 80 cm wide (200+ gallons), or preferably an indoor pond. THE SNAPPING SNOUT DANGER: The tank must be kept relatively bare and open in the swimming lanes. If a Gar panics and hits the glass, its delicate, long, toothy snout will snap cleanly in half, permanently disabling the fish. Heavy, clamped lids with a thick air-gap beneath are mandatory to allow breathing without escaping.
Feeding: The Tongs-Trained Piscivore ('Impale and Swallow'). Feeding them pet store goldfish is a death sentence via parasites. The hardest part of keeping a Gar is weaning the stubborn, live-food addict onto dead food. You MUST use long feeding tongs to vigorously wiggle massive, whole thawed silversides (smelt), giant raw shrimp, and thick strips of white fish in front of their faces until instinct takes over and they strike. Once trained, they are voracious, but adults only need heavy feedings 2-3 times a week.
Water Quality: The Cool, Hard-Water Survivor. THE BIGGEST MISTAKE: Keeping them in a 85°F Amazonian tank. Gars are temperate fish; they prefer unheated, room-temperature water (15-25°C / 60-78°F) and will suffer metabolic burnout if kept permanently hot. They prefer hard, alkaline water (pH 7.0-8.0) and thrive beautifully with the addition of marine salt (brackish conditions). Colossal filtration is required to handle the rotting waste of a heavy carnivore, though the fish itself is practically immune to low oxygen.
Compatibility: The 'Cold Monster' Division. DO NOT mix Gars with tropical South American or Asian giants (Arowanas, Pacus, Stingrays) due to drastically conflicting temperature requirements. The ultimate, proper 'North American Native' giant tank features the Gar living peacefully alongside Bowfin, massive adult Sunfish (Bluegill/Pumpkinseed), Channel Catfish, or large temperate Cichlids (like the Texas Cichlid). Any slender, small fish will instantly be impaled and eaten.
Reproduction: The Toxic Egg Spawner. Breeding is virtually never achieved in home aquariums. In the wild, they breed in massive, thrashing groups in shallow, flooded spring plains. THE LETHAL SECRET: The bright green eggs of the Gar are highly toxic/poisonous to birds, mammals, and humans—an evolutionary defense mechanism to stop them from being eaten while they sit exposed in the shallows. The tiny fry have an adhesive disc on their snouts to stick to grass until they can swim.
Risks: 1. THE BROKEN BEAK (Snout Fracture): The most horrific, common injury. The panicked, rigid fish fires itself like a torpedo directly into the thick glass wall. The long upper jaw shatters, leaving the fish horribly deformed and physically unable to hunt or eat, starving to death in agony. 2. TROPICAL BURNOUT: Forcing a cool-water North American fish to live its entire life in boiling 86°F water with Amazonian stingrays, causing its immune system and organs to prematurely fail. 3. JUMPING OUT: Launching entirely out of an uncovered tank and dying on the hard floor.
Fish profile
- Tank level
- Surface
- Adult size
- 112 cm
- GH
- 10 dGH - 20 dGH
- KH
- n/a
- TDS
- n/a
- Conductivity
- n/a
Image gallery
Licensed images linked to the species or, when marked, to the closest representative taxon.