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Hi I'm planning to start an aquarium with a small variety of corydoras. I
was planning on putting 5 of them together in a 12 gallon aquarium. I haven't purchased anything for the tank yet so any advice on aquarium furniture (I was thinking aquarium wood) and appropriate live plants would be great. Would guppies be a good tankmate for them? If not what would be a good choice? I would like to avoid neon tetras or zebra danios as I already have another tank with those types of fish. As I'm sure you can tell from this post I'm pretty green when it comes to home aquaria so I would like to avoid any highly demanding plants or fish. Thanks for any advice! |
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On Sat, 30 Jun 2007 08:48:17 -0700, "newguy62497"
wrote: Hi I'm planning to start an aquarium with a small variety of corydoras. I was planning on putting 5 of them together in a 12 gallon aquarium. I haven't purchased anything for the tank yet so any advice on aquarium furniture (I was thinking aquarium wood) and appropriate live plants would be great. Would guppies be a good tankmate for them? If not what would be a good choice? I would like to avoid neon tetras or zebra danios as I already have another tank with those types of fish. As I'm sure you can tell from this post I'm pretty green when it comes to home aquaria so I would like to avoid any highly demanding plants or fish. Thanks for any advice! 5 seems an over kill. I have 2 each in 2 10 gallon tanks and 4 in a 75. Plants are great and all of my tanks have "low light" varieties. However, I rarely see the Corys in the 75 and one of the 10. They stay hidden in the plants. The one 10 that I do get to see them hasn't grown so thick as in the other 2. They seem to get along well with a wide variety of fish, big and small. I like Red Serpae Tetras, lots of color, swim a lot, very visible. Another I like is the Harlequin Raspora. I have 9 of each in their own 10 gallon tank. Be careful not to over crowd your tank. That and over feeding is the beginners biggest problems. I change 2 gallons of water each week. I believe is the secret to a healthy tank and is a safeguard to over feeding. I first had tanks as a teenager. Then when I was in my 50s and here again at age 72. I worry what will happen to my fish when I die. They are living longer than I expected. Tanks are not easily moved about, so try to think long term for the sake of the fish. |
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On Jun 30, 10:48?am, "newguy62497" wrote:
Hi I'm planning to start an aquarium with a small variety of corydoras. I was planning on putting 5 of them together in a 12 gallon aquarium. I haven't purchased anything for the tank yet so any advice on aquarium furniture (I was thinking aquarium wood) and appropriate live plants would be great. Would guppies be a good tankmate for them? If not what would be a good choice? I would like to avoid neon tetras or zebra danios as I already have another tank with those types of fish. As I'm sure you can tell from this post I'm pretty green when it comes to home aquaria so I would like to avoid any highly demanding plants or fish. Thanks for any advice! Hi there. A 12g tank isn't going to be a lot of room for many of the Cory types. However, there are dwarf varieties and smaller types to choose from. Panda cories stay pretty small. The males don't get much over an inch and half long, I'd say. The females are a little larger, but you'd do fine with 5 Pandas (mostly males). Local shops can usually order certain things that they may not always carry, such as Pigmy Cories. These little guys are the cutest Cory of all (IMO). They stay very small (maybe an inch long), school like a group of neons and they often hover in a group, in mid water level. They're not your average Cory. They also have the cutest little faces. You could actually have a good sized school of them in a 12g. They'd need plants to perch on though. Again, these little Cories don't act like the typical Cory cats. They like top perch on plants too. = )~ Do a search on them if you've never seen them. |
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On Sun, 01 Jul 2007 07:30:34 -0700, Tynk wrote:
On Jun 30, 10:48?am, "newguy62497" wrote: Hi I'm planning to start an aquarium with a small variety of corydoras. I was planning on putting 5 of them together in a 12 gallon aquarium. I haven't purchased anything for the tank yet so any advice on aquarium furniture (I was thinking aquarium wood) and appropriate live plants would be great. Would guppies be a good tankmate for them? If not what would be a good choice? I would like to avoid neon tetras or zebra danios as I already have another tank with those types of fish. As I'm sure you can tell from this post I'm pretty green when it comes to home aquaria so I would like to avoid any highly demanding plants or fish. Thanks for any advice! Hi there. A 12g tank isn't going to be a lot of room for many of the Cory types. However, there are dwarf varieties and smaller types to choose from. Panda cories stay pretty small. The males don't get much over an inch and half long, I'd say. The females are a little larger, but you'd do fine with 5 Pandas (mostly males). Neither of my species (Emerald and ?) are over an inch. Local shops can usually order certain things that they may not always carry, such as Pigmy Cories. These little guys are the cutest Cory of all (IMO). They stay very small (maybe an inch long), school like a group of neons and they often hover in a group, in mid water level. They're not your average Cory. They also have the cutest little faces. You could actually have a good sized school of them in a 12g. They'd need plants to perch on though. Again, these little Cories don't act like the typical Cory cats. They like top perch on plants too. = )~ I have never seen my Corys perch on plants. Too bad for me, I would get to see them once in a while. Just the 2 in one of the ten gallon tanks are out front, often zooming from side to side, up and back down. They are good bottom cleaners, for sure. Do a search on them if you've never seen them. |
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Dick wrote in
: On Sun, 01 Jul 2007 07:30:34 -0700, Tynk wrote: On Jun 30, 10:48?am, "newguy62497" wrote: Hi I'm planning to start an aquarium with a small variety of corydoras. I was planning on putting 5 of them together in a 12 gallon aquarium. I haven't purchased anything for the tank yet so any advice on aquarium furniture (I was thinking aquarium wood) and appropriate live plants would be great. Would guppies be a good tankmate for them? If not what would be a good choice? I would like to avoid neon tetras or zebra danios as I already have another tank with those types of fish. As I'm sure you can tell from this post I'm pretty green when it comes to home aquaria so I would like to avoid any highly demanding plants or fish. Thanks for any advice! Hi there. A 12g tank isn't going to be a lot of room for many of the Cory types. However, there are dwarf varieties and smaller types to choose from. Panda cories stay pretty small. The males don't get much over an inch and half long, I'd say. The females are a little larger, but you'd do fine with 5 Pandas (mostly males). Neither of my species (Emerald and ?) are over an inch. Wow. Healthy emerald corys (brochis splendens) should be two or two and a half inches total body length... I have never seen my Corys perch on plants. Too bad for me, I would get to see them once in a while. Just the 2 in one of the ten gallon tanks are out front, often zooming from side to side, up and back down. They are good bottom cleaners, for sure. Are you sure you're talking about the same fish? Emerald Corys aren't a cleaner fish. They're heavy-bodied armored catfish, ominvores with a taste for worms, benthic inverts and insect larvae... What you're describing (inch-long algae/bottom cleaners) sound more like Otocinclus cats, to me. Pics; Brochis spendens http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.u...splendens2.jpg otocinclus sp. http://www.holendry.republika.pl/img...clus_2_1_m.jpg Regards DaveZ |
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Wow, I just looked at those Otocinclus cats and maybe I'll put two of those
in with the Pygmy Corrys they looks pretty spiffy too! "atomweaver" wrote in message ... Dick wrote in : On Sun, 01 Jul 2007 07:30:34 -0700, Tynk wrote: On Jun 30, 10:48?am, "newguy62497" wrote: Hi I'm planning to start an aquarium with a small variety of corydoras. I was planning on putting 5 of them together in a 12 gallon aquarium. I haven't purchased anything for the tank yet so any advice on aquarium furniture (I was thinking aquarium wood) and appropriate live plants would be great. Would guppies be a good tankmate for them? If not what would be a good choice? I would like to avoid neon tetras or zebra danios as I already have another tank with those types of fish. As I'm sure you can tell from this post I'm pretty green when it comes to home aquaria so I would like to avoid any highly demanding plants or fish. Thanks for any advice! Hi there. A 12g tank isn't going to be a lot of room for many of the Cory types. However, there are dwarf varieties and smaller types to choose from. Panda cories stay pretty small. The males don't get much over an inch and half long, I'd say. The females are a little larger, but you'd do fine with 5 Pandas (mostly males). Neither of my species (Emerald and ?) are over an inch. Wow. Healthy emerald corys (brochis splendens) should be two or two and a half inches total body length... I have never seen my Corys perch on plants. Too bad for me, I would get to see them once in a while. Just the 2 in one of the ten gallon tanks are out front, often zooming from side to side, up and back down. They are good bottom cleaners, for sure. Are you sure you're talking about the same fish? Emerald Corys aren't a cleaner fish. They're heavy-bodied armored catfish, ominvores with a taste for worms, benthic inverts and insect larvae... What you're describing (inch-long algae/bottom cleaners) sound more like Otocinclus cats, to me. Pics; Brochis spendens http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.u...splendens2.jpg otocinclus sp. http://www.holendry.republika.pl/img...clus_2_1_m.jpg Regards DaveZ |
#7
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On Mon, 02 Jul 2007 18:07:47 GMT, atomweaver
wrote: Dick wrote in : On Sun, 01 Jul 2007 07:30:34 -0700, Tynk wrote: On Jun 30, 10:48?am, "newguy62497" wrote: Hi I'm planning to start an aquarium with a small variety of corydoras. I was planning on putting 5 of them together in a 12 gallon aquarium. I haven't purchased anything for the tank yet so any advice on aquarium furniture (I was thinking aquarium wood) and appropriate live plants would be great. Would guppies be a good tankmate for them? If not what would be a good choice? I would like to avoid neon tetras or zebra danios as I already have another tank with those types of fish. As I'm sure you can tell from this post I'm pretty green when it comes to home aquaria so I would like to avoid any highly demanding plants or fish. Thanks for any advice! Hi there. A 12g tank isn't going to be a lot of room for many of the Cory types. However, there are dwarf varieties and smaller types to choose from. Panda cories stay pretty small. The males don't get much over an inch and half long, I'd say. The females are a little larger, but you'd do fine with 5 Pandas (mostly males). Neither of my species (Emerald and ?) are over an inch. Wow. Healthy emerald corys (brochis splendens) should be two or two and a half inches total body length... I have never seen my Corys perch on plants. Too bad for me, I would get to see them once in a while. Just the 2 in one of the ten gallon tanks are out front, often zooming from side to side, up and back down. They are good bottom cleaners, for sure. Are you sure you're talking about the same fish? Emerald Corys aren't a cleaner fish. They're heavy-bodied armored catfish, ominvores with a taste for worms, benthic inverts and insect larvae... What you're describing (inch-long algae/bottom cleaners) sound more like Otocinclus cats, to me. Pics; Brochis spendens http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.u...splendens2.jpg Brochis Spendens is my fish. I bought 6 of them about a year ago from an internet vendor. The four I see (2 in each 10 gal tank) seem quite healthy. The 2 in a 75 gallon tank stay under the bottom growth. I haven't seen those 2 for awhile. I have very limited names I recognize. I bought the Emeralds from a picture the vendor had posted. I don't know Brochis Spenden as a name as the vendor billed me for Emerald Corys. Definitely NOT Otocinclus. otocinclus sp. http://www.holendry.republika.pl/img...clus_2_1_m.jpg Regards DaveZ |
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Dick wrote in
: Brochis Splendens is my fish. I bought 6 of them about a year ago from an internet vendor. The four I see (2 in each 10 gal tank) seem quite healthy. Hey, neat. If they're healthy, you might think about trying to breed them. A dwarf strain emerald cory would be nifty. My 5 y.o. daughter wants a small (10-20 gal) tank in her room with cories; pygmies or pandas are the only permanent choices for that size tank which are widely available now. I've grown out two c. paleatus in a 10 gallon, and at 2.25 and 3 inches of body length, they're going to have to have a new home very soon... turns out, they're a mating pair. Most cories breed pretty readily in a quiet aquarium (the only other fish in my 10 were three zebra danios... lotsa motion in the mid-tank. The Cories bred the day after they were removed to keep another tank cycled, I think it was probably a contributing factor... a little peace 'n quiet and some privacy, ya know? ;-) That, plus good water parameters, and a cooling water change (from 75, down to 70 degF) were all they needed... I have very limited names I recognize. NP, that's why I used pictures with the sci names. DaveZ |
#9
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On Mon, 02 Jul 2007 08:15:49 -0500, Dick
wrote: What a ****ing degenerate name "DICK" I just now kids had fun as well as adults with that name DICK! |
#10
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On Mon, 02 Jul 2007 14:49:40 -0500, A. Paul Ing
wrote: On Mon, 02 Jul 2007 08:15:49 -0500, Dick wrote: What a ****ing degenerate name "DICK" I just now kids had fun as well as adults with that name DICK! My family thinks of me a Dick, I now introduce myself as Richard. I am too old to worry about implications. Actually, I never had a problem with school chums making fun. I don't think the pennis association was so common back then. A psychiatrist was showing a set of pictures to his patient. Every card caused the patient to tell a story with a sexual theme. Finally, the psychiatrist observed, "You seem to think about sex a lot." "Well, sir, its your dirty pictures." |
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