FAQs on Australian
Biotopes, Organisms
Related Articles: Biotopes -
Part 1 by Alesia Benedict, Biotopic
Set-Ups, Aquascaping for Beginners; Twenty
Tips for Realistic Aquaria by Neale Monks, Aquascaping,
Adventures in Aquascaping by Timothy S. Gross
pH, alkalinity,
acidity, Treating Tap Water,
Freshwater Aquarium Water Quality,
Freshwater
Maintenance,
Related FAQs: African Biotopes, N. American Natives, Amazon Biotopes, S.E. Asian Biotopes, Planted River Biotopes, Small System Biotopes & Treating Tap Water for Aquarium Use,
pH, Alkalinity, Acidity, Freshwater Algae Control, Algae Control, Foods, Feeding, Aquatic Nutrition, Disease,
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Hi
Would 1 Australian bass, 2 spangled perch and 2 silver perch go
together in a 4 foot aquarium with plenty of cover?
1/26/10
<Wouldn't bank on it. Almost none of the large Australian
perciforms are good community fish once sexually mature. The Australian
Bass (by which I assume you mean Macquaria novemaculeata) for example
is a good aquarium resident in terms of being hardy and not especially
active, adults are notoriously intolerant of tankmates. Bidyanus
bidyanus, as I think we've discussed before, are too aggressive to
keep with tankmates. Spangled Perch
(Leiopotherapon unicolor) is, like most of the large Teraponids, a
schooling fish but prone to being a bully and aggressive towards other
fish; keep either single or in groups of 6+ specimens, and don't
mix with other fish. For a tank as small as 120 cm/4 feet, your best
bets for native Australian species would be among the Ambassidae,
Eleotridae, and perhaps some of the smaller catfish families Ariidae
and Plotosidae. Cheers, Neale.>
... more mixed Australian FW comp....
1/26/10
Hi
Would jade perch juveniles and Australian bass juveniles live together
until they mature then I can just get rid of them (give to a pet
shop)
<For a while perhaps. Depends how small they are, and how big the
tank is.
But why bother? Why not review the needs of a particular fish, and set
a tank up that works long term, or else choose fish species that will
coexist. If you haven't already got in touch with them, I cannot
recommend too strongly those nice guys over at ANGFA. As well as
collecting trips, they also help share information on Australian fresh
and brackish water fish species, with a particular focus on aquarium
husbandry. They even have a forum! At least two members contributed
chapters to my Brackish Water Fishes book. Cheers, Neale.>
Australian native fish (compatibility,
feeding) 05/27/09
hi my name is jack
<My name is Neale and I don't have a phobia of capitalized
letters... seriously, we do ask people write to us using standard
English so it's easier to read and publish their e-mails on our web
site.>
and I have a 122cm long, 46cm wide, 46cm high, fish tank with an under
gravel filter and a canister filter and my question is, can I keep
Australian bass and silver perch
<Only juveniles will fit into this tank. Silver Bass, Bidyanus
bidyanus, get to around 30-40 cm, and although primarily herbivorous in
the wild, they can, will eat meaty foods including shrimps and
earthworms. As such, they'll need a tank with sufficient filtration
capacity to deal with both high levels of ammonia (from the meat) and
solid waste (from the plant foods you'll be giving them). Like most
herbivores, they're very hard on aquatic plants! The Australian
Bass, Macquaria novemaculeata, normally gets to about 20-30 cm under
aquarium conditions, but wild specimens can be twice that size, so you
obviously want to provide this fish with lots of space and lots of
filtration. They are migratory fish that move into brackish or
saltwater to spawn, and while they seem to do fine (other than
breeding) when permanently maintained in freshwater, they do need a
strong current so they can "stretch their fins" and swim
about the aquarium. Neither species is sociable once mature, and adults
are normally kept alone.>
in the same tank with various small loaches and small gudgeons and will
bass eat flake or will I have to buy different food (maybe pellets) or
will I have to feed them frozen or live food?
<I wouldn't mix them with small loaches or sleeper gobies
(gudgeons) simply because you'll have trouble getting food past
these two very active perciform fish! Even assuming your loaches and
gobies were big enough not to be viewed as food, I'd fear
they'd starve. Does rather depend on the size of the tank and how
big the perciforms were you were keeping though, so you might
experiment. Still, do understand the needs of these perciform fish, and
act accordingly. As for foods, live foods will be favoured, so would
use a variety of such, earthworms and river shrimps being the ideal
staples. Augment with wet frozen foods, including mosquito larvae,
bloodworms, krill, etc. As always, take care to minimize the use of
thiaminase-rich foods, and don't use live feeder fish at all.
Silver Bass are herbivores, so their diet should contain Sushi Nori,
cooked peas, soft aquatic plants, etc.>
thanks a lot
<Cheers, Neale.>
Australian bass 05/29/09
Hi,
can Australian bass eat flake or pellets?
<They are not reported to do so, no. Wild-caught fish obviously
won't recognize pellets or flake as being edible. The usual thing
with wild-caught fish is to give them live foods to begin with, and
once the fish learns that what you offer is edible, they usually take
frozen foods and often take pellets. But rarely will they take pellets
or flake from Day 1.>
because I'm just a kid and really don't have enough money for
frozen or live food.
<Earthworms are free, and if you have a garden that isn't
sprayed with chemicals, they're safe to use. Most fish love
them!>
thanks
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Macquaria ambigua (Australian natives; housing, diet)
5-30-3009
Hi
<Hello again,>
will golden perch live in a 4 foot tank, 1 and a 1/2 foot high and wide
with silver perch and small native gudgeons and will they eat flake or
pellets?
<Macquaria ambigua are good aquarium fish, but like all Macquaria
species they are aggressive, predatory, and rather large; adults of
this species may be up to 75 cm long! So they need an aquarium
sufficiently large for such a fish. Typical aquarium specimens are
around the 30 cm mark, and you'd need a tank measuring some 750
l/200 US gallons. They are an aquacultured species, and readily take
appropriate pellet foods (good quality carnivore pellets, for
example).>
P.S. I love wet web media
<Good oh!>
thanks
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: More Australian natives 5/30/2009
hi
<Hello again. I have asked a couple times that you use capital
letters when writing to us. Please do so, or next time, your message
will simply be bounced back to you unanswered. We rely on properly
formatted questions to make the FAQ pages, and only properly formatted
questions attract hits from Google and other search engines, and
it's that which pays to keep the site running. I know some folks
find it incredibly painful to hit the Shift key now and again when
typing, but please, make the effort.>
can purple spotted gudgeons, silver perch, small gudgeons and
freshwater sole live together in a 4 foot long by 1 and a 1/2 foot high
and wide
<Not a chance.>
without eating each other and will the freshwater sole and purple
spotted gudgeons eat flake
<Freshwater Soles are extremely difficult to maintain. Even assuming
you have collected one of the genuinely freshwater species from
Australia, such as Brachinus salinarum, these fish are slow, night-time
feeders that consume only live foods (worms, insect larvae). Most of
the traded species
are brackish water species that simply die in freshwater aquaria. In
either case, Soles are best kept on their own, at least to begin with.
Mogurnda species are fairly adaptable, and some specimens will accept
pellets, but mostly they need wet frozen or live foods: earthworms,
shrimps, bloodworms, etc.>
and are the purple spotted gudgeon really aggressive?
<Yes, Mogurnda species are territorial and can be fairly aggressive.
You wouldn't keep them with Soles. They are also predatory towards
whatever they can swallow, and since Mogurnda mogurnda is up to 17 cm
long, that's a fish that can eat small fish and shrimps. But they
are also partly herbivorous, so you do need to give them plant-based
foods, such as cooked peas or algae pellets. On the whole Mogurnda
species are best kept alone or with other robust fish.>
thanks
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: More Australian natives 5/30/2009
Hi,
Is it possible to breed silver perch in an aquarium 4 foot long by 1
and a 1/2 wide and high.
<No. Bidyanus bidyanus is a gregarious species in the wild that
breeds in large groups (dozens of individuals) but under aquarium
conditions adults are prone to being very aggressive towards their own
kind. Furthermore, sexually mature animals are going to be something
like 30 cm in length, far too big for your aquarium. Has been bred in
fish farms though, so you can obtain details via the aquaculture
literature.> What are the differences in the gender and what is
required in the breeding?.
<Males and females are identical, except that "ripe"
females (i.e., females containing eggs) are distinctly rounded.>
Thanks.
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Yet more Australian natives 6/1/2009
Hi,
<Hello,>
Im
<I'm...>
jack
<Jack...>
and Im planning to start up a worm farm and Im planning to feed a few
worms a day to my Australian bass. I am yet to get the worm farm or the
bass but I have had my tank running for at least a year and I was
wondering if this would be a good idea and would the bass live
healthily on this diet?.
<Earthworms are good, especially if you vary what the worms eat
before they're given to the fish. But you wouldn't want to use
them exclusively, any more than it wouldn't be a good idea for
humans to live off avocado pears, no matter how healthy they are. So by
all means use them as a staple, but augment the diet with other foods.
Macquaria spp can usually be trained to accept chunky frozen foods; try
things like small pieces of white fish (tilapia, for example), squid,
and even occasional bits of beef heart might work. Mealworms and other
insects would be taken as well. Like most Groupers, Macquaria
novemaculeata can be trained to be hand-fed, but use tongs to avoid
being bitten!>
I also have some small gudgeons and if I put a small amount of fish
flake in for the gudgeons and a few worms in for the bass would this
all turn out ok?
<Wouldn't bank on it. Macquaria spp. are boisterous at feeding
time and distinctly predatory. I'd expect the poor Gudgeons to
simply end up either bullied or eaten (probably in that order, as the
Macquaria mature).>
Is there any significant thing I should know about keeping Australian
bass ( e.g.. water temp, hiding places, anything.)
<They're much like any other member of the Serranidae, so much
written about Groupers as marine fish applies to these freshwater
relatives. Your main problem is their size: Macquaria novemaculeata get
to around 30 cm in captivity. Admittedly, they aren't especially
active when mature, but still, don't overcrowd them, and plan on
heavy duty filtration and lots of water changes. Best kept slightly on
the cool side (18-20 C) and in water that isn't too
soft/acidic.>
Thanks a bunch.
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: More of the same questions about Australian Natives
6/5/2009
Hi
could you suggest some good Australian native tank mates to go with my
silver perch and gudgeons in a 4 foot by 1 and a half foot high and
wide tank and any food requirements and tank condition as well
thanks
<Jack, if I could humbly suggest you contact the experts on
Australian fish, over at ANGFA:
http://www.angfa.org.au/intro.html
You'll find people there who work with nothing other than
Australian natives. They have a forum: introduce yourself, and enjoy!
As I've stated several times to you already, your Silver Perch
(Bidyanus bidyanus) will
eventually get far too large for this tank, easily 40 cm, and
potentially 60 cm in length once mature. They're not sociable fish,
and mature adults are very aggressive towards each other. Older
specimens will need to be kept alone. You might possibly find some
species of native catfish that would do okay with, one of the
"Cobblers" for example (family Plotosidae) but I wouldn't
bank on it. Your Gudgeons (what the rest of the world calls Sleeper
Gobies, family Eleotridae) will certainly have a very rough time.
Few Australian fish enthusiastically take dried food, so more than
likely you'll be using either live foods (earthworms, shrimps,
etc.) or their frozen equivalents. As I say, ANGFA are the people to
speak to about
Australian freshwater fish. Finally, for the love of God, use capital
letters next time you write. I've asked this of you several times,
and better men than I would simply bounce back incorrectly written
messages
unanswered! Cheers, Neale.> <<Am not better, but I know I
would. RMF>>