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#1
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I've got a tank with a group of L046, Zebra pleco. I've been wondering of
there's a fish, a choolong fish perhaps, that would be safe to keep in the tank considering I'm hoping the Zebras will breed. It will have to be a fish that will leave eggs and fry alone, and not in any way disturb the catfish. |
#2
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Whats " choolong"? Shoaling?
My Zebras are currently in a SA community tank but for breeding they need a tank of their own or maybe tiny higher water fish like dwarf pencilfish or Endler's. The fry are tiny & slow growing. I have one here that is about 8/9mm at a month old so they are easy prey once they get out of their cave. They are also quite tricky to feed. "McEve" wrote in message ... I've got a tank with a group of L046, Zebra pleco. I've been wondering of there's a fish, a choolong fish perhaps, that would be safe to keep in the tank considering I'm hoping the Zebras will breed. It will have to be a fish that will leave eggs and fry alone, and not in any way disturb the catfish. |
#3
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![]() "Sue" wrote in message ... Whats " choolong"? Shoaling? Yes - English is my second language, so sometimes I miss by a mile in my attempts of spelling right ![]() My Zebras are currently in a SA community tank but for breeding they need a tank of their own or maybe tiny higher water fish like dwarf pencilfish or Endler's. The fry are tiny & slow growing. I have one here that is about 8/9mm at a month old so they are easy prey once they get out of their cave. They are also quite tricky to feed. My Zebras are now in a tank wich they only share with a baby ancistrus, for keeping algae at bay. I have 8 in a 120 liter, and are a bit worried about that not being enough for establishing a good balance in the tank, bacteria wise. Have you published any information about how you went about getting them to spawn? It would be very interesting to read ![]() |
#4
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![]() The fry are tiny & slow growing. I have one here that is about 8/9mm at a month old so they are easy prey once they get out of their cave. They are also quite tricky to feed. My Zebras are now in a tank wich they only share with a baby ancistrus, for keeping algae at bay. I have 8 in a 120 liter, and are a bit worried about that not being enough for establishing a good balance in the tank, bacteria wise. Have you published any information about how you went about getting them to spawn? It would be very interesting to read ![]() Mike Edwardes is the guy you want;- http://mike-edwardes.members.beeb.net/Hzebra.html I bought his colony when he changed to amphibians.Mike reckons the fry do better removed as soon as they leave the cave. They do better in planted tanks but bare bottoms with java moss & fern on rocks or wood make for easier maintainence. The more small hidey holes the better & they do seem to like terracotta. Not having dither fish means you can keep Daphnia in the tank for a food source. The tiny fry need frequent feeds of tiny live/frozen foods. HTH Sue |
#5
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"McEve" wrote in message
... "Sue" wrote in message ... snip My Zebras are now in a tank wich they only share with a baby ancistrus, for keeping algae at bay. I have 8 in a 120 liter, and are a bit worried about that not being enough for establishing a good balance in the tank, bacteria wise. The bacterial balance you need is to match the fish load. Biological capability will level to their waste production. You cannot have too small a fish-load. As for dither, if you are breeding Zebras, I would resist adding anything, for a variety of reasons. -- www.NetMax.tk |
#6
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![]() "NetMax" wrote in message news ![]() "McEve" wrote in message ... "Sue" wrote in message ... snip My Zebras are now in a tank wich they only share with a baby ancistrus, for keeping algae at bay. I have 8 in a 120 liter, and are a bit worried about that not being enough for establishing a good balance in the tank, bacteria wise. The bacterial balance you need is to match the fish load. Biological capability will level to their waste production. You cannot have too small a fish-load. As for dither, if you are breeding Zebras, I would resist adding anything, for a variety of reasons. -- www.NetMax.tk Thank you both, I will do as you advice! I can see now that I made a wrong conclusion about bacterial balance. The baby ancistrus won't disturb them though, will it...? (max length allowed for the cleaner is 3 cm, a bit over an inch.) |
#7
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"McEve" wrote in message
... "NetMax" wrote in message news ![]() "McEve" wrote in message ... "Sue" wrote in message ... snip My Zebras are now in a tank wich they only share with a baby ancistrus, for keeping algae at bay. I have 8 in a 120 liter, and are a bit worried about that not being enough for establishing a good balance in the tank, bacteria wise. The bacterial balance you need is to match the fish load. Biological capability will level to their waste production. You cannot have too small a fish-load. As for dither, if you are breeding Zebras, I would resist adding anything, for a variety of reasons. -- www.NetMax.tk Thank you both, I will do as you advice! I can see now that I made a wrong conclusion about bacterial balance. The baby ancistrus won't disturb them though, will it...? (max length allowed for the cleaner is 3 cm, a bit over an inch.) There is a risk, but I can't comment on its severity or probability. Most fish are opportunistic. If an Ancistrus came across fish eggs, you are chancing that it would not eat them. I would let the algae grow long as it harbours lots of microscopic life which a newborn Zebra might appreciate. -- www.NetMax.tk |
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