![]() |
Differences between....
Hi,
What is the difference between a Red Oscar and a Red Tiger Oscar, other than slight differences in the way they look. The lfs's in my area always charge around $10-12 for the red tiger oscars, but the red oscars are usually only $5-6. What is the difference that would make one more costly than the other. Is the red tiger hardier and "better" for some reason? TIA, Viper |
"Jason Tsangaris" wrote in message 7.131... Hi, What is the difference between a Red Oscar and a Red Tiger Oscar, other than slight differences in the way they look. The lfs's in my area always charge around $10-12 for the red tiger oscars, but the red oscars are usually only $5-6. What is the difference that would make one more costly than the other. Is the red tiger hardier and "better" for some reason? TIA, Viper You're looking at color variations usually associated with geographical collection differences. In either case, no matter the cost, you're going to have problems with oscars in a 29 gallon tank. ;-) As Netmax said in your earlier post, your tank is undersized for the fish your keeping. Tank size is in part determined by the size of the fish and the amount of waste they generate. Another big consideration is the aggressiveness of the fish and the amount of territory they'll claim as their own. With both your oscar and firemouth, a 29 gallon tank will be claimed as their territory. Neither fish, IMO, once they mature a bit, will allow for anything else to live within that territory. Research is key to any happy tank. I'd look at a larger tank, or exploring the thousands of stocking possibilities for your 29 gallon tank. There are many dwarf species of cichlids that are beautiful and interesting that'll fit your space requirements. Just something to consider. Tim www.fishaholics.org |
Tank size is in part determined by the size of the fish and the amount of waste they generate. Another big consideration is the aggressiveness of the fish and the amount of territory they'll claim as their own. With both your oscar and firemouth, a 29 gallon tank will be claimed as their territory. Neither fish, IMO, once they mature a bit, will allow for anything else to live within that territory. Research is key to any happy tank. I'd look at a larger tank, or exploring the thousands of stocking possibilities for your 29 gallon tank. There are many dwarf species of cichlids that are beautiful and interesting that'll fit your space requirements. Just something to consider. Tim www.fishaholics.org Hi Jason, I did what you just did and Tim and Netmax gave me the same advice. I put seven mid size cichilds in my 26g (bad advice from my fish store for sure). I took them back, gave them "scat" and now have some rasporas, rams, key holes and cory's. ;-} Told my wife that when I retire (in 2-3 years) I want a BIG tank so I can have some larger cichlids to enjoy. Her response naturally is "where would we put it?" No problem! Move out the TV, the couches, the... oops..OT sorry. ;-}All the best, Larry Southern Ontario |
Yeah, i agree on the points made in the other post, but lets not
be negative eh? im sure viper will heed our warnings and do the right thing. The differance between the several groups of oscars is the colouration. there are even yellow and blue specimins being bred (not dyed) but apparently they are very expensive. -- Posted via CichlidFish.com http://www.cichlidfish.com/portal/forums |
Jason Tsangaris wrote:
What is the difference between a Red Oscar and a Red Tiger Oscar, other than slight differences in the way they look. That's the only difference -- the difference in the way they look. --Mark:cool: -- Posted via CichlidFish.com http://www.cichlidfish.com/portal/forums |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:14 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FishKeepingBanter.com