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Home/Aquaculture/Food Fish/Climbing Perch

Raising Climbing Perch: An Ultra-Hardy Survival Fish

A guide to farming climbing perch - an extraordinarily hardy air-breathing food fish that survives out of water for hours, farmed across warm Asian ponds where its toughness makes it nearly foolproof.

Climbing Perch
Gives
Ultra-hardy survival fish
Space
Pond / tank
Water
Warm
Effort
Beginner

Climbing perch may be the toughest food fish you can raise - an air-breathing species so hardy it survives out of water for hours and can even wriggle over damp ground between ponds. Farmed across warm Asia, its extraordinary resilience means it tolerates crowding, low oxygen and poor water that would wipe out other fish, and it is sold live with almost no equipment. For a warm climate, it is nearly foolproof.

Is it right for you?

Climbing perch suit a warm-climate grower who wants the hardiest possible food fish, tolerant of low oxygen, crowding and rough handling. It is about as forgiving as aquaculture gets.

System & Space

A warm pond or tank suits them; their air-breathing lets them thrive in low-oxygen, crowded conditions and simple systems. Secure the system, as they can climb and escape.

Water & Temperature

They are warm-water fish that, thanks to air-breathing, handle low oxygen and poor quality extremely well. Warmth and containment are the main considerations.

Stocking & Feeding

Stock fingerlings and feed pellets, scraps and whatever is available; they are unfussy, omnivorous and tolerant of high density.

Health & Care

Exceptionally hardy and disease-resistant; the main 'problem' is their tendency to escape over land, so keep the system secure. Because climbing perch are a declared invasive in many places and can spread overland, treat that escape risk as an ecological and legal hazard: never release them into the wild, and confirm they are legal to keep where you live before starting. Avoid cold.

Harvest & Enjoying Them

They reach market size in months, giving a tasty (if bony) flesh popular across Asia, and famously stay alive to market with minimal handling.

Getting Started

Set up a warm, secure pond or tank, stock fingerlings, and feed them freely; their toughness forgives most beginner mistakes.

Common Mistakes

Not securing the system (they climb out and travel), and cold water, are the main mistakes; little else troubles them.

FAQ

Can they really leave the water? Yes - they breathe air and survive hours out of water, even moving over land. That is also why they are a declared invasive in many regions: keep them escape-proof, never release them, and check local legality first.

Hard to keep alive? No - among the hardiest food fish there is.

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