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-   -   Will this fish mix get along (http://www.fishkeepingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=17074)

Christopher Kollmann December 29th 04 03:37 AM

Will this fish mix get along
 
Hello,

I'm starting a 55 gallon Mbuna tank. After doing some research,
especially on www.cichlid-forum.com, I was thinking of stocking the
following mix of fish:

4 Labidochromis caeruleus
4 Pseudotropheus socolofi
3 Synodontis multipunctatus

Will these fish get along together? Is this stocking level good? The
tank is heavily decorated with rocks, with many hiding places. Any
other suggestions?

Thanks in advance.

Chris Kollmann


--
Chris Kollmann

NetMax December 29th 04 03:55 AM

"Christopher Kollmann" wrote in message
...
Hello,

I'm starting a 55 gallon Mbuna tank. After doing some research,
especially on www.cichlid-forum.com, I was thinking of stocking the
following mix of fish:

4 Labidochromis caeruleus
4 Pseudotropheus socolofi
3 Synodontis multipunctatus

Will these fish get along together? Is this stocking level good? The
tank is heavily decorated with rocks, with many hiding places. Any
other suggestions?

Thanks in advance.

Chris Kollmann



I generally put mbuna into larger tanks (70g+) so they don't get on each
other's cases too soon, however Labs are fairly mellow (on the mbuna
scale of aggression ;~), and Socolofi are dwarfs (though testy). It
sounds like a nice mix. You could put some ditherfish in there too, to
bring the mbuna out more and to give some color/activity to the upper
portion of the tank. Since you have yellow, blue and black, how about
some Tiger barbs (green, albino or even regular). If you want to stay
with the African theme, some Julies or Lamp. Brichardis would work too,
though they can sometimes reproduce faster than desirable.
--
www.NetMax.tk



Christopher Kollmann December 29th 04 04:29 AM

Quoth ,

"Christopher Kollmann" wrote in message
...
Hello,

I'm starting a 55 gallon Mbuna tank. After doing some research,
especially on
www.cichlid-forum.com, I was thinking of stocking the
following mix of fish:

4 Labidochromis caeruleus
4 Pseudotropheus socolofi
3 Synodontis multipunctatus

Will these fish get along together? Is this stocking level good? The
tank is heavily decorated with rocks, with many hiding places. Any
other suggestions?

Thanks in advance.

Chris Kollmann



I generally put mbuna into larger tanks (70g+) so they don't get on each
other's cases too soon, however Labs are fairly mellow (on the mbuna
scale of aggression ;~), and Socolofi are dwarfs (though testy). It
sounds like a nice mix. You could put some ditherfish in there too, to
bring the mbuna out more and to give some color/activity to the upper
portion of the tank. Since you have yellow, blue and black, how about
some Tiger barbs (green, albino or even regular). If you want to stay
with the African theme, some Julies or Lamp. Brichardis would work too,
though they can sometimes reproduce faster than desirable.


Thanks for the feedback.

Hmm, I kind of like the idea of some dither fish, if that won't put too
much bio-load on the tank. However, my research indicates Barbs prefer
softer, slightly acidic water. Is that true? If so, that's not exactly
the environment I going for with these Mbuna. I'll look into the
Julies, that may be a good idea. I was hesitant to mix Tanganyika and
Malawi fish, but I just love the looks of the Cuckoo Cats, so I'm
already messing with nature in this tank. Anybody else have good
suggestions for dither fish that will get along with this mix and enjoy
harder, higher pH water?



--
Chris Kollmann

Glenn December 29th 04 06:38 AM

I have had good luck with tiger barbs with my yellow labs, and Rusties, too
(Iodotropheus sprengerae). Also, I like the giant Danio for dither. They
both do well with the hard alkaline water. Be sure to keep the Tiger barbs
in a group of 5 or more, and they leave everyone alone.


Christopher Kollmann" wrote in message
.. .
Quoth ,

"Christopher Kollmann" wrote in message
...
Hello,

I'm starting a 55 gallon Mbuna tank. After doing some research,
especially on
www.cichlid-forum.com, I was thinking of stocking the
following mix of fish:

4 Labidochromis caeruleus
4 Pseudotropheus socolofi
3 Synodontis multipunctatus

Will these fish get along together? Is this stocking level good? The
tank is heavily decorated with rocks, with many hiding places. Any
other suggestions?

Thanks in advance.

Chris Kollmann



I generally put mbuna into larger tanks (70g+) so they don't get on each
other's cases too soon, however Labs are fairly mellow (on the mbuna
scale of aggression ;~), and Socolofi are dwarfs (though testy). It
sounds like a nice mix. You could put some ditherfish in there too, to
bring the mbuna out more and to give some color/activity to the upper
portion of the tank. Since you have yellow, blue and black, how about
some Tiger barbs (green, albino or even regular). If you want to stay
with the African theme, some Julies or Lamp. Brichardis would work too,
though they can sometimes reproduce faster than desirable.


Thanks for the feedback.

Hmm, I kind of like the idea of some dither fish, if that won't put too
much bio-load on the tank. However, my research indicates Barbs prefer
softer, slightly acidic water. Is that true? If so, that's not exactly
the environment I going for with these Mbuna. I'll look into the
Julies, that may be a good idea. I was hesitant to mix Tanganyika and
Malawi fish, but I just love the looks of the Cuckoo Cats, so I'm
already messing with nature in this tank. Anybody else have good
suggestions for dither fish that will get along with this mix and enjoy
harder, higher pH water?



--
Chris Kollmann




luminos December 29th 04 08:22 AM


Since you have yellow, blue and black, how about
some Tiger barbs (green, albino or even regular).


NetMax, you have given so much great information, but this suggestion
astounds me.

Can you elaborate?




Susan December 29th 04 12:19 PM

I have read that rainbow fish are a popular dither fish choice in rift lake
aquariums....

Susan

"Christopher Kollmann" wrote in message
.. .
Quoth ,

"Christopher Kollmann" wrote in message
...
Hello,

I'm starting a 55 gallon Mbuna tank. After doing some research,
especially on
www.cichlid-forum.com, I was thinking of stocking the
following mix of fish:

4 Labidochromis caeruleus
4 Pseudotropheus socolofi
3 Synodontis multipunctatus

Will these fish get along together? Is this stocking level good? The
tank is heavily decorated with rocks, with many hiding places. Any
other suggestions?

Thanks in advance.

Chris Kollmann



I generally put mbuna into larger tanks (70g+) so they don't get on each
other's cases too soon, however Labs are fairly mellow (on the mbuna
scale of aggression ;~), and Socolofi are dwarfs (though testy). It
sounds like a nice mix. You could put some ditherfish in there too, to
bring the mbuna out more and to give some color/activity to the upper
portion of the tank. Since you have yellow, blue and black, how about
some Tiger barbs (green, albino or even regular). If you want to stay
with the African theme, some Julies or Lamp. Brichardis would work too,
though they can sometimes reproduce faster than desirable.


Thanks for the feedback.

Hmm, I kind of like the idea of some dither fish, if that won't put too
much bio-load on the tank. However, my research indicates Barbs prefer
softer, slightly acidic water. Is that true? If so, that's not exactly
the environment I going for with these Mbuna. I'll look into the
Julies, that may be a good idea. I was hesitant to mix Tanganyika and
Malawi fish, but I just love the looks of the Cuckoo Cats, so I'm
already messing with nature in this tank. Anybody else have good
suggestions for dither fish that will get along with this mix and enjoy
harder, higher pH water?



--
Chris Kollmann




NetMax December 29th 04 06:17 PM

"luminos" wrote in message
...

Since you have yellow, blue and black, how about
some Tiger barbs (green, albino or even regular).


NetMax, you have given so much great information, but this suggestion
astounds me.

Can you elaborate?



My pleasure luminos, but what aspect of my suggestion have you found
astounding, my sense of colour coordination, the layering of species or
the range of natural origins being mixed together?

For layering, the Syno holds the bottom 10%, the Socolofi the next 25%,
the labs about the middle 50% (overlapping into the Socolofi territory),
leaving the top of the tank empty, which 7 Tigers would sill nicely. For
swimming behaviour they also contrast each other with territorial to a
roving pack grouping.

On colours, there are already yellow fish (Labs) and blue with black
banding (Soco), and the Syno are monochrome, so I was looking for
different colours. Tiger barbs come naturally (line-bred) in 3 colour
forms, regular banded, green and albino (you know that I'd never suggest
a dyed fish).

On place of origin (water parameters & behaviour), they are all close
enough if the water is not to an extreme, and the tank is not
overstocked.

Does that help?
--
www.NetMax.tk



Amateur Cichlids December 29th 04 06:21 PM


"Christopher Kollmann" wrote in message
...
Hello,

I'm starting a 55 gallon Mbuna tank. After doing some research,
especially on www.cichlid-forum.com, I was thinking of stocking the
following mix of fish:

4 Labidochromis caeruleus
4 Pseudotropheus socolofi
3 Synodontis multipunctatus

Will these fish get along together? Is this stocking level good? The
tank is heavily decorated with rocks, with many hiding places. Any
other suggestions?

Thanks in advance.

Chris Kollmann


Chris,
As Netmax stated, most of the Mbuna do better in a 75 gallon tank. If
you're going with a 55 gallon, consider some of the smaller Mbuna instead of
the Pseudotropheus species. Even the dwarf species of Mbuna can be a bit
aggressive for a 55. You may be better off with Cynotilapia or Iodotropheus
species. Another option would be to mix some Aulonocara with the yellow
labids. Many of the Labidochromis species, like the caeruleus are
insectivores. They eat a mix of algae and insects from the biocover. This
allows them to have a more varied diet where most of the other Mbuna species
need a diet primarily vegetarian in nature.
A note on the P. socolofi. Netmax mentioned them as dwarf Mbuna. In the
wild these fish obtain lengths of about three inches. Most of the P.
socolofi in the trade right now are tank raised. In tanks, these fish have
been recorded up to lengths of six inches or more. Not exactly a dwarf Mbuna
at that size. Also, when purchasing P. socolofi, be certain you're getting
the right fish. They are found in the wild in a couple locations along side
Metriaclima aurora and visibly look identical. It's easy to catch small M.
aurora and mistake them for P. socolofi.
As for dither fish, I've moved away from them in my tanks now. Once the
fish are used to you, they're out enough to not have to worry about it. If
you build up the rock work enough in the tank, the fish will cover the
entire range. If you stick with Mbuna and do 6 L. caeruleus, (1m/2f) and do
say 6 Cynotilapia afra (2m/4f) with lots of rock work, the tank will be
alive with activity.
Just my thoughts.
Tim (aka AmateurCichlids)
www.fishaholics.org



Sarah Navarro December 29th 04 11:53 PM

Excuse my dumbness, I'm still relatively new to fish, but what are dither
fish? Thanks.

Sarah

"Amateur Cichlids" wrote in message
m...

"Christopher Kollmann" wrote in message
...
Hello,

I'm starting a 55 gallon Mbuna tank. After doing some research,
especially on www.cichlid-forum.com, I was thinking of stocking the
following mix of fish:

4 Labidochromis caeruleus
4 Pseudotropheus socolofi
3 Synodontis multipunctatus

Will these fish get along together? Is this stocking level good? The
tank is heavily decorated with rocks, with many hiding places. Any
other suggestions?

Thanks in advance.

Chris Kollmann


Chris,
As Netmax stated, most of the Mbuna do better in a 75 gallon tank. If
you're going with a 55 gallon, consider some of the smaller Mbuna instead
of the Pseudotropheus species. Even the dwarf species of Mbuna can be a
bit aggressive for a 55. You may be better off with Cynotilapia or
Iodotropheus species. Another option would be to mix some Aulonocara with
the yellow labids. Many of the Labidochromis species, like the caeruleus
are insectivores. They eat a mix of algae and insects from the biocover.
This allows them to have a more varied diet where most of the other Mbuna
species need a diet primarily vegetarian in nature.
A note on the P. socolofi. Netmax mentioned them as dwarf Mbuna. In the
wild these fish obtain lengths of about three inches. Most of the P.
socolofi in the trade right now are tank raised. In tanks, these fish have
been recorded up to lengths of six inches or more. Not exactly a dwarf
Mbuna at that size. Also, when purchasing P. socolofi, be certain you're
getting the right fish. They are found in the wild in a couple locations
along side Metriaclima aurora and visibly look identical. It's easy to
catch small M. aurora and mistake them for P. socolofi.
As for dither fish, I've moved away from them in my tanks now. Once the
fish are used to you, they're out enough to not have to worry about it. If
you build up the rock work enough in the tank, the fish will cover the
entire range. If you stick with Mbuna and do 6 L. caeruleus, (1m/2f) and
do say 6 Cynotilapia afra (2m/4f) with lots of rock work, the tank will be
alive with activity.
Just my thoughts.
Tim (aka AmateurCichlids)
www.fishaholics.org




Christopher Kollmann December 30th 04 12:57 AM

Quoth ,

Chris,
As Netmax stated, most of the Mbuna do better in a 75 gallon tank. If
you're going with a 55 gallon, consider some of the smaller Mbuna instead of
the Pseudotropheus species. Even the dwarf species of Mbuna can be a bit
aggressive for a 55. You may be better off with Cynotilapia or Iodotropheus
species. Another option would be to mix some Aulonocara with the yellow
labids. Many of the Labidochromis species, like the caeruleus are
insectivores. They eat a mix of algae and insects from the biocover. This
allows them to have a more varied diet where most of the other Mbuna species
need a diet primarily vegetarian in nature.
A note on the P. socolofi. Netmax mentioned them as dwarf Mbuna. In the
wild these fish obtain lengths of about three inches. Most of the P.
socolofi in the trade right now are tank raised. In tanks, these fish have
been recorded up to lengths of six inches or more. Not exactly a dwarf Mbuna
at that size. Also, when purchasing P. socolofi, be certain you're getting
the right fish. They are found in the wild in a couple locations along side
Metriaclima aurora and visibly look identical. It's easy to catch small M.
aurora and mistake them for P. socolofi.
As for dither fish, I've moved away from them in my tanks now. Once the
fish are used to you, they're out enough to not have to worry about it. If
you build up the rock work enough in the tank, the fish will cover the
entire range. If you stick with Mbuna and do 6 L. caeruleus, (1m/2f) and do
say 6 Cynotilapia afra (2m/4f) with lots of rock work, the tank will be
alive with activity.
Just my thoughts.
Tim (aka AmateurCichlids)
www.fishaholics.org

Interesting. Thank you for the information. I had not realized that
socolofi got that big. Boy, it seems like everything I read about
cichlids is later contradicted by someone else (seen today on
cichlidtank.com: Pseudotropheus demasoni described as "moderately
peaceful," which is not what I've read at all). Maybe C. afra is the
way to go, if I can find them around here. I know you recommended
against Pseudotropheus, but what about Pseudotropheus acei? From what
I've read, they are supposedly fairly peaceful, but I'm beginning to
wonder about the accuracy of my sources. Do you think they would be a
good fit for this tank?

Thanks for all your help.

Chris

--
Chris Kollmann


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