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#11
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![]() "Christopher Kollmann" wrote in message .. . 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, As for the differing opinions, you'll find them not only online, but also in some of the more trusted books out there. From reading online, in books and personal experience, P. demasoni are anything but peaceful. They are very pretty though. For the P. socolofi and their ability to get larger than normal in tanks, that comes from Ad Konings and "Malawi Cichlids in their natural habitat". The P. acei if you get the species from Ngara are fairly peaceful. That much I agree with. ![]() They are found in the lake in a sandy area where a lot of trees are fallen in the water or overhang the water. They form a large community there as opposed to guarding a specific area. They were the most peaceful Pseudotropheus I've owned. I can't speak for some of the other acei species I've seen, because I've never owned them. I don't know how any of the acei will react in a 55 gallon. Mine were in a 75 when I had them. There's also the Iodotropheus sprengerae to consider. Tim www.fishaholics.org |
#12
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Hello Netmax and other members,
First time poster. Was pleasantly surprised to find a ng just for cichlid lovers. Wife bought me a 26g (don't laugh) for Christmas. I thought it was pretty big but notice that many are talking 55g plus in this ng. Guess I'll work up to it. I have just put in 7 cichlids and notice as you pointed out that the top half is not used too much. I have two yellow Labs, two dolphin and two zebras and one can't remember. They are just babies now (1" +). Eventually I want to put in a pleco and small eel or blue crayfish. Do I have any room to add more with the 26g tank or should I be satisfied with what I have? TIA All the best, Larry Southern Ontario |
#13
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"Larry" wrote in message
... Hello Netmax and other members, First time poster. Was pleasantly surprised to find a ng just for cichlid lovers. Wife bought me a 26g (don't laugh) for Christmas. I thought it was pretty big but notice that many are talking 55g plus in this ng. Guess I'll work up to it. I have just put in 7 cichlids and notice as you pointed out that the top half is not used too much. I have two yellow Labs, two dolphin and two zebras and one can't remember. They are just babies now (1" +). Eventually I want to put in a pleco and small eel or blue crayfish. Do I have any room to add more with the 26g tank or should I be satisfied with what I have? TIA All the best, Larry Southern Ontario Do you want the good news or the bad news first? ;~) The good news is that you have started with some of the more interesting and personable types of fish in the trade. The bad news is that you will soon be hooked, and within a year, you will look back fondly at your 26g which will be a quarantine or a fry tank, and be admiring your dolphins swimming back & forth in their 60 to 100g tank (dolphins or Cyrtocara moorii get to about 20cm (7-8 inches) and are best kept in groups of about 5 to 7 fish). They group fairly nicely with Labs which have similar diets but prefer the lower reaches of the tank (the dolphins will take to the upper reaches as they mature). Labs are properly kept in small groups as well. Zebra (some type of Pseudotropheus) can have nastier dispositions and require more vegetation in their diet. They will be your 'black sheep' and will probably make that tank feel smaller than it is for the other occupants. Trade secret: larger tanks are in many regards, much easier to take care of than smaller tanks. Personally, my smallest tank which I have patience to operate is 40g, and I really prefer larger than 60g as this is when I find the system stabilizes much more easily, jmo. Please look into cycling *important* as it sounds like these fish were just dropped into a new tank. They will die or suffer tremendously in the accumulation of their own waste unless you take aggressive action to control this while the tank cycles (establishes a colony of bacteria which converts fish waste into less toxic forms). http://faq.thekrib.com/begin-cycling.html ps: more fish - bad idea, unless you were already cycled, and were just using this as a grow-out tank, before they were moved into something bigger in 8 months. jmho -- www.NetMax.tk |
#14
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Thanks for responding. Sounds to me like we had better be running not
walking these babies (dolphins and maybe even the zebras) back to the fish store. We TOLD the guy there that we didn't want anything larger than 4" fully grown but I guess he figured we were amateurs from the get go. What others will live nicely with the little yellow guys (and not get huge)? Larry On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 13:03:28 -0500, "NetMax" wrote: The bad news is that you will soon be hooked, and within a year, you will look back fondly at your 26g which will be a quarantine or a fry tank, and be admiring your dolphins swimming back & forth in their 60 to 100g tank (dolphins or Cyrtocara moorii get to about 20cm (7-8 inches) and are best kept in groups of about 5 to 7 fish). |
#15
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![]() While your dolphins might not get to 7 inches, I don't think they would have much trouble getting well over 4". I would not put medium to large African cichlids in a 26g. I find that their territory tends to be in the neighbourhood of 20g, and their tolerance for other fish within their territory tends to be poor *cough*. Your results might vary with some of the smaller dwarf species, such as Julidochromis or better yet, some of the Neolamprologous. A 26g is more for a small community tank of less aggressive and less territorial fishes. In cichlids, this would be something from the Apistogramma family (South America, if your tap water is generally neutral to soft). Do a bit of research and get a few more poster's advice. This is a hobby with much anecdotal advice and results will vary considerably. I think I remember www.cichlidrecipe.com having a recipe for small tanks with Africans if you are set on them (and your source water is naturally hard & alkaline). That might help you. -- www.NetMax.tk "Larry" wrote in message ... Thanks for responding. Sounds to me like we had better be running not walking these babies (dolphins and maybe even the zebras) back to the fish store. We TOLD the guy there that we didn't want anything larger than 4" fully grown but I guess he figured we were amateurs from the get go. What others will live nicely with the little yellow guys (and not get huge)? Larry On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 13:03:28 -0500, "NetMax" wrote: The bad news is that you will soon be hooked, and within a year, you will look back fondly at your 26g which will be a quarantine or a fry tank, and be admiring your dolphins swimming back & forth in their 60 to 100g tank (dolphins or Cyrtocara moorii get to about 20cm (7-8 inches) and are best kept in groups of about 5 to 7 fish). |
#16
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#17
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![]() "Christopher Kollmann" wrote in message .. . LFS guy is recommending overstocking the tank, he claims I should end up with 20-30 cichlids in a 55 gallon, added 8-12 at a time. Is that a good idea? The tank is a 55 gallon, with crushed coral and a lot of rock work, filtered by an Eheim 2126. Thanks, Chris -- Although overstocking is a common method of aggression control, 30 cichlids in a 55 is too many fish. IMO. I'd stick with 6-8 of each. With the yellow labids, I'd only do a single male. With the Cynotilapia, I'd do two males with four to six females. Research the C. afras carefully, as some of them can be quite aggressive. Depending on where you're located, Pam Chin typically has C. afra juveniles and hangs out on the forum at cichlid-forum.com Tim |
#18
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![]() "Christopher Kollmann" wrote in message .. . Thanks Tim. I knew 30 sounded like way too many. Looks like I've got some more research to do about the afra. I'm in Boston, planning to get my fish from Uncle Ned's Fish Factory. -- Chris Kollmann Too bad you didn't want to do West Africans. =) I have plenty of kribs you could drive down to get. Tim |
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