![]() |
Companions for tinfoils
In a previous post I mentioned moving all my small fish to another
tank as the tinfoil's had destroyed all the plants (even the Java fern) and a few fish as well. (my fault - uninformed buy - didn't ask enough questions - anyway too late now) The new setup is working fine. As to the old tank (1.2m - 450l) what can I put in with the 4 tinfoil's. There are some plastic plants (they don't seem to like them G) and rocks. Algae growth is pretty prolific. Thoughts a 1 x Red tailed shark (1 only as aggressive with own) Algae eater - shops here can't say whether they are Siamese or Chinese. Anything else? --------- Skil-Phil |
On Sat, 18 Jun 2005 10:55:09 -0400, "NetMax"
wrote: "Phil Hansen" wrote in message .. . As to the old tank (1.2m - 450l) what can I put in with the 4 tinfoil's. There are some plastic plants (they don't seem to like them G) and rocks. Algae growth is pretty prolific. Tinfoils aren't too hard to cohabitate fish with, if you have the water volume. Either match them (ie: Congo tetras, Bala Sharks...), or contrast them (ie: Tiger Barbs, medium-large sized cichlids...), or keep entirely out of their space (ie: Plecos, Catfish...). The best choices will vary according to the size of the Tinfoils (I've seen them kept with Oscars), and the size of your...... pond ;~). Reading Baensch he says Bala sharks and tiger barbs need plants. If it is, I suppose more plastic will have to do as nothing live will survive. This worries me about a pleco as any wafer or lettuce etc will be consumed before he could get to it. What cichlids were you thinking of? Thanks for the link checked the differences in the algae eaters. Will be better informed on the next trip to the city. --------- Skil-Phil |
"Phil Hansen" wrote in message
... On Sat, 18 Jun 2005 10:55:09 -0400, "NetMax" wrote: "Phil Hansen" wrote in message . .. As to the old tank (1.2m - 450l) what can I put in with the 4 tinfoil's. There are some plastic plants (they don't seem to like them G) and rocks. Algae growth is pretty prolific. Tinfoils aren't too hard to cohabitate fish with, if you have the water volume. Either match them (ie: Congo tetras, Bala Sharks...), or contrast them (ie: Tiger Barbs, medium-large sized cichlids...), or keep entirely out of their space (ie: Plecos, Catfish...). The best choices will vary according to the size of the Tinfoils (I've seen them kept with Oscars), and the size of your...... pond ;~). Reading Baensch he says Bala sharks and tiger barbs need plants. If it is, I suppose more plastic will have to do as nothing live will survive. This worries me about a pleco as any wafer or lettuce etc will be consumed before he could get to it. What cichlids were you thinking of? Thanks for the link checked the differences in the algae eaters. Will be better informed on the next trip to the city. --------- Skil-Phil I prefer silk plants, though sometimes Tinfoils will nibble out of habit. Regarding cichlids, Firemouths, Oscars, Rainbows, Texans, Geos etc. Only one, introduced at a young age. Regarding the pleco, with some rock ground cover, try to direct a wafer back there after the Tinfoils are swimming around with a wafer in their mouths ;~). Ultimately it might not be a good mix if you can't feed the pleco, but there are usually ways to do it. -- www.NetMax.tk |
On Sat, 18 Jun 2005 16:20:48 +0200, Phil Hansen
wrote: In a previous post I mentioned moving all my small fish to another tank as the tinfoil's had destroyed all the plants (even the Java fern) and a few fish as well. (my fault - uninformed buy - didn't ask enough questions - anyway too late now) The new setup is working fine. As to the old tank (1.2m - 450l) what can I put in with the 4 tinfoil's. There are some plastic plants (they don't seem to like them G) and rocks. Algae growth is pretty prolific. Thoughts a 1 x Red tailed shark (1 only as aggressive with own) Algae eater - shops here can't say whether they are Siamese or Chinese. Anything else? Skil-Phil The best algae eater I've ever seen is the Black Shark, Morulius chrysophekadion. As a lone algae eater in a large tank it can't be beaten. It won't eat blue-green hair algae, but normal green algae you get from sunlight will disappear. They do get quite large, and are therefore a good tankmate for Tinfoils. If you want some outrageously cool fights, put a Red-tailed Black Shark together with a Black, but the Black Shark should be a bit larger when you purchase them. -Derek |
On Sun, 19 Jun 2005 10:12:03 -0400, "NetMax"
wrote: lots of snipping I prefer silk plants, though sometimes Tinfoils will nibble out of habit. Regarding cichlids, Firemouths, Oscars, Rainbows, Texans, Geos etc. Only one, introduced at a young age. Regarding the pleco, with some rock ground cover, try to direct a wafer back there after the Tinfoils are swimming around with a wafer in their mouths ;~). Ultimately it might not be a good mix if you can't feed the pleco, but there are usually ways to do it. Thanks for the advice --------- Skil-Phil |
On Sun, 19 Jun 2005 16:13:07 +0200, Derek Benson
wrote: The best algae eater I've ever seen is the Black Shark, Morulius chrysophekadion. As a lone algae eater in a large tank it can't be beaten. It won't eat blue-green hair algae, but normal green algae you get from sunlight will disappear. They do get quite large, and are therefore a good tankmate for Tinfoils. If you want some outrageously cool fights, put a Red-tailed Black Shark together with a Black, but the Black Shark should be a bit larger when you purchase them. Thanks. Never noticed a black shark in the local shops. Will look next time. --------- Skil-Phil |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:42 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FishKeepingBanter.com