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#1
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New to cichlids, interested in starting a tank 55gallons or so, and am
wondering what kinds of setups are best. Malawi? Tanganika? I'd like to have fish that stay relatively small (no oscars, please) and possibly some plants, but beyond that I'm looking for suggestions on where to start. I'd like to keep fish from relatively the same natural locations. |
#2
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It's largely a matter of personal preference. I'd prefer a Tanganyikan
tank with *lamprologus, julidochromis, and the like. Lotsa rockwork, sand substrate. As for plants, java moss and java fern do well. I've also had good luck with Vallisneria, and imagine Sagittarius would do well. There are other plants which would tolerate the hard water with enough light, but can't tell ya off the top of my head. If you go Malawi and you want plants, you'd probably wanna stick with haplochromines rather than mbuna, as the latter would probably chew up your vegetation. wrote: New to cichlids, interested in starting a tank 55gallons or so, and am wondering what kinds of setups are best. Malawi? Tanganika? I'd like to have fish that stay relatively small (no oscars, please) and possibly some plants, but beyond that I'm looking for suggestions on where to start. I'd like to keep fish from relatively the same natural locations. |
#3
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On 1 Oct 2006 21:28:37 -0700, "
wrote: New to cichlids, interested in starting a tank 55gallons or so, and am wondering what kinds of setups are best. Malawi? Tanganika? I'd like to have fish that stay relatively small (no oscars, please) and possibly some plants, but beyond that I'm looking for suggestions on where to start. I'd like to keep fish from relatively the same natural locations. Go for a Tanganyika tank but stick to the small rock dwellers and avoid the mouthbrooders. Stack the rocks up to the surface. Most of the small Neolamprologus will live and breed in the rocks and not usually dig plants up. Steve -- Steve Wolstenholme Neural Planner Software EasyNN-plus. The easy way to build neural networks. http://www.easynn.com |
#4
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Pretty much what everyone else suggested. Malawians will dig more in
most cases then Tangs. I always use rock, with plenty of caves, and plant work usually within the rock. If your avoiding "size" then you probably don't want Frontosa, or mbuna. |
#5
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![]() wrote: New to cichlids, interested in starting a tank 55gallons or so, and am wondering what kinds of setups are best. Malawi? Tanganika? I'd like to have fish that stay relatively small (no oscars, please) and possibly some plants, but beyond that I'm looking for suggestions on where to start. I'd like to keep fish from relatively the same natural locations. Go here, scroll down to cichlids, look, read. http://www.aquahobby.com/e_gallery.php I'm like a kid in a candy store when I start clickin' on this page. steve |
#6
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#7
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... New to cichlids, interested in starting a tank 55gallons or so, and am wondering what kinds of setups are best. Malawi? Tanganika? I'd like to have fish that stay relatively small (no oscars, please) and possibly some plants, but beyond that I'm looking for suggestions on where to start. I'd like to keep fish from relatively the same natural locations. I'd say start with a nice malwai mbuna setup. get some tough, aggro, colourful fish try your hand at breeding, then sell them off as colonys and fry and try for some thing tricky that has caught your eye mbuna are ridiculously tough and beautiful they spawn to spite you! an example with ample filtration and weekly water changes that would give heaps of fry would be... Melanochromis interruptus x3 hongi x3 blue pindani x3 rusty x3 throw in some electric blues x3 red empress x3 and a lake victorian male like a crimson dawn or nyerie or xmas fulu or brownea... but only one! and maybe a girl for him or just buy random peacock males and feed colour food for an incredible display or just a colony of one species or a tanga biotype ![]() they can be pretty but are a tad harder than malawi or vics due to higher pH aragonite sand makes a sweet substrate as it buffers nice and high |
#8
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I agree with the other posters. A good mbuna tank is always a nice
start, and in fact, always nice period. I've been in the hobby since 1988, and still have an all mbuna tank today, they are beauty's. 55 gallon is perfect. As the others said, keep good filteration, a weekly, no worse then bi-weeekly water change ( 50% to 60%), a good 7.0 PH or so, give them plenty of rocks ( natural habitat look), I like to stack them to the top, making caves here and there. And toss in some good plants here and there, might as well grab just a few plastic ones, as no doubt, mbuna's dig, dig, dig. Enjoy. |
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