FAQs About Loach Systems
Related Articles: Loaches,
Dojos/Weatherfish, A New Look At Loaches
By Neale Monks,
Related FAQs: Loaches 1, Loaches
2, Clownloaches,
Kuhli
Loaches, Loach Identification, Loach Behavior, Loach Compatibility, Loach Selection, Loach Feeding, Loach Disease, Loach Reproduction,
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Chain loach and Cherry Barb? (salt tolerance question)
11/14/12
Hi Neale,
<Jill,>
I'm wanting to start up chain loaches and cherry barbs.
<Two very nice and versatile species.>
I read your article on loaches,
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_6/volume_6_2/loaches.htm
I read other articles too at various sites and I asked this question at
several fish stores. There was a difference in opinions.
<Indeed?>
I heard the loaches (chain loach) don't tolerate salt, though one
article and one fish store said theirs tolerated minimal salt. But
since they are saying something different from everyone else, I figure I
should get your opinion and trust that first.
<Depends what sort of salinity you're talking about. Like all freshwater
fish, they will tolerate very low salinities, around 2 gram/litre,
across short terms, e.g., a week or two, for the purposes of treating
Whitespot.
Using salinity in this way is much safer than using copper- or
formalin-based medications. On the other hand, routine addition of salt
isn't necessary when keeping these or any freshwater fish, and elevated
salinity levels as you'd need for brackish water fish will stress most
loaches. One or two species naturally inhabit brackish water habitats,
for example the Horseface Loach, and can do well around the 3-4 g/l
salinity level, but I'm not aware of any loach that prefers brackish
water or does well in even middling-salinity brackish water. Oh, and the
idea that loaches are "scaleless fishes" and therefore more sensitive to
salt is a myth perpetrated by folks without biology degrees! Moray eels
are fish without scales but live in the sea, as are of course sharks. On
the other than, there are plenty of fish with scales (such as Rift
Valley cichlids) that come to obvious harm when salt is routinely added
to their tanks (Malawi Bloat being the commonest problem). Salinity
tolerance is all to do with the osmoregulation, in particular organs
that conserve or remove salt and water. For sure some groups of fish are
less tolerant of salt than others, but it's not as easy as simply saying
that if the fish has scales, it's more tolerant of salt.>
I have a 29 gallon....I'm switching the fish that are there to another
one as they neither eat snails nor share water type with those that do!
Currently the 29 tank has 1 tbsp aquarium salt per 5 gallons.
<An unnecessary addition.>
Could the Cherry barbs tolerate that amount initially? I suspect
they will but I just want to be sure.
<As with the loaches, so too with the cyprinids. A handful of barbs
tolerate low-end brackish conditions indefinitely, such as the Ticto
Barb and Olive Barb, but most are strictly freshwater fish and shouldn't
be exposed to salt across the long term. Again, short term usage of 2
g/l salinity levels are fine.>
I will change a third of the water, adding more water with no salt
before I add them.
<Very wise.>
How many water changes should I do before the water will be fresh enough
to add chain loaches?
<One tablespoon is 3 teaspoons, or about 3 x 6 = 18 gram salt (but check
with your own kitchen scales). 5 US gallons is about 19 litres, so
you're adding 18 grams of salt to about 19 litres of water, so barely 1
gram per litre. That's a trivial salinity level, and won't do even these
fish any harm across the short term. On the other hand, it won't be
doing much good either; it's too little to treat Whitespot, and there's
always the risk that across months, years such usage of salt can
interfere with the osmoregulation of freshwater fish. I'm not a big fan
of routine use of salt in freshwater tanks.>
Do Cherry Barbs cycle ok, as I don't have very many fish in there now,
plus they're tiny? (I'll be adding 6 so it will probably cycle.)
I'm hoping to find small ones.
<Cherry Barbs are quite hardy, so all else being equal, they can get
through the cycling process, though I'd strongly recommend maturing the
tank beforehand, or at least adding some live biological media from
another tank.>
I plan to add driftwood too, and more plants once I add the chain
loaches.
The reason for the switch is I learned the hard way about snails. So
future plants in other tanks that I wish to keep clean will either be
certified snail free (yeah, PetSmart sells those!) or rinsed in a
solution.
<Do the latter; dip the plants, then put in the tank. Be careful with
the dips though: used at high concentration as a dip, potassium
permanganate at least can kill plants if used for too long.>
Also, is it really necessary to change water weekly for chain
loaches?!??
<Depends entirely on stocking density and how often the fish are fed. If
the tank is understocked and you feed sparingly, then you can probably
go 2-3 weeks between 20% water changes. But most community tanks are
fully stocked, if not overstocked, so water changes are crucial to
keeping the fish healthy.>
I'll be adding more plants, a longer strip of a bubbler, and there will
be 6 each cherry barb and 6 chain loaches in 29 gallons.
<That's an understocked tank.>
I usually change water every 3 weeks. Should I change to weekly or
every 2 weeks?
<If you want. Keep an eye on the fish, and do pH and nitrate tests every
couple weeks just to be sure, at least for the first 2-3 months. If pH
drops a lot, or nitrate is way above the ambient level in your tap
water, then you may be doing too few water changes.>
One more thing... Sometimes the house temp gets to 79 or 80, is that
going to make the water too hot?
<Unlikely. Evaporation tends to keep fish tanks a bit cooler than the
room.
In any event, providing the tank only gets warm in the day, but cools
down at night, then these are tropical fish after all and will adapt to
such things.>
I probably need to lower the heater for the loaches. I can barely
read the thermometer but it's in the green safe zone for tropical fish.
<Set the heater around the 24 C/75 F mark, and see what happens. If the
fish are heat-stressed, the loaches will gulp air and the barbs will be
close to the surface all the time.>
Thanks Neale! I'm very new to this hobby, and your articles are
always helpful.
<Thanks for the kind words. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Chain loach and Cherry Barb? (salt tolerance question)
Thank you. Great info!
<Welcome.>
I look forward to getting these fish. The male barbs have a nice
colour
<As ever though, be sure to get as many females as males, if not more --
with more females to display to, the males develop better colours
without fighting all the time. Unlike plain vanilla barbs, Cherry Barbs
are somewhat territorial.>
and I've always liked the little chain loaches. They're active and
interesting. I hope they all get along without bullying.
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Chain loach and Cherry Barb? (salt tolerance question)
11/17/12
Just curious, Neale, About Mollies I'd heard this answer is "no," and
that they're NOT a sociable fish, that they merely "tolerate" other fish
due to not being true schoolers.....(I've misplaced that article). But
then I saw an article today that you'd written on them that begs to
differ on their sociability:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/mollies.htm
The pet store clerks also speak highly of molly sociability. And their
tanks are heavily stocked. But here I'm thinking of going to loach
and barb due to that my mollies were so unfriendly. Would increasing the
number of mollies make them less inclined to bully?!??!!
<Yes indeed. Like cichlids, if the Molly males are numerous, none can
become overly dominant, and none will be bullied too much. That's the
theory anyway, and on the whole, it works, as you've likely seen in your
retailer's tank. It's when you have one male Molly and he chases all the
other livebearers around that people realise how aggressive male Mollies
can be. Furthermore, if you keep just a pair, then unless the tank is
large and well-planted, chances are the male will harass the female
endlessly.>
1st I understocked them. I had 5 females and 1 male in a 29
gallon, then I added a female, then I added a male.
<Two males will create a dominance structure, with the strongest male
likely chasing the other all the time. But if you had, say, 5 males,
then this isn't likely to happen. On the other hand, if you wanted
females as well, then you'd have to have 10 females to those 5 males,
and that's a lot of fish for the average community tank (though as the
heart of a Molly aquarium around the 55 gallon mark, they'd be lovely).>
I had thought I was doing good to have a low stock. The bullying was
primarily done by females, and it would leave the weaker ones cowering
in a cave or behind the many plants looking ill.
<It's unusual for females to be aggressive, but I guess it does happen.>
I became known as the lady who'd bring mollies back in a day or so and
I'd trade them. Once I even tried having 3 males to 3 females as an
experiment....and it was no better. (A pet store clerk suggested
that!)
((( Off topic- Also, if one's water is quite hard like an 8, it's
still advisable to do low end brackish, correct?)))
<Hmm… "8" what? 8 degrees dH is not especially hard. What's the
carbonate hardness? If that's high as well, say, 5-8 degrees KH, and the
pH stays around the 7.5 to 8 mark, then you might be fine without salt.
Nonetheless, I'd always choose Molly companions that I knew could
tolerate salt, just in case you needed to use it because the Mollies
were always getting sick. Horseface Loaches, Brown Hoplo Catfish, Ticto
Barbs, Blue Acara and most Rainbowfish are examples of fish that don't
need salt but will tolerate 2-3 grammes per litre without complaint, and
this can be just enough to keep Mollies hearty and healthy.>
I was going to switch species and see if using driftwood and heavily
planting would bring it to steady 7.5 for changing over to the loaches
and rosy barbs...and if that didn't work then I was thinking to try peat
filtration and have diamond tetras and rummy nose if that worked, what
the heck anyway if it's that much trouble--have the sparkly beauties!!!
<Both Diamonds and Rummynose Tetras are lovely fish, but as you realise,
not good companions for Mollies. While you don't need to go out of your
way to create very soft water for them, you certainly do want to be
aiming for between 2-12 degrees dH, pH 6-7.5 for them.>
But I love the mollies, and the only reason I'm switching from them was
I didn't enjoy the evil junior high schoolyard scenes they put on daily!
(Which altered their health). (True, my water had been salted
according to popular Mollie lore, and I understand now I must use marine
salt if I do them again.)
<Hmm… do also research Liberty Mollies (Poecilia salvatoris). They are
extremely pretty fish, silvery with red, white and blue markings, but a
mean disposition, so not good community fish. But in large groups they
work well together, and if you feel like trying something special with
Mollies, they're great fish. Oh, and do also look at Ameca splendens, a
Goodeid with lovely colours and a very feisty personality, but in a
group of 3 males and 5-6 females, I had not the least trouble in a
180-litre aquarium. My point is, livebearers are more aggressive than
people realise, so big groups help.>
Thanks again... if you tell me a stock number will probably
erase my ills I'll even do water changes bi-weekly for them and low
level brackish. If they're just plain ornery, I need to let
Go!!!!! But I sort of feel like giving them one more
try if I can find some advise.
<Mollies are definitely worth keeping, but as you realise, the bigger
the group, the easier.>
Jill
P.S. This guy suggests isolations, which I was doing (using a 10 gallon)
and it helped. But it was a pain in the blank to have to
constantly be switching out bratty females. (I wonder if a 2.5
gallon like he used would be more effective in that it's really no fun!)
http://www.tropicalfishkeeping.com/livebearers/help-aggressive-female-molly-61201/
I'm mainly just wondering if the aggression was a stock issue, or maybe
I needed to move the current ones out into the 10 gallon and rearrange
things before adding new and put everyone in at once?
<Isolation works as a one-off, but it's hardly practical in the long
term.>
or do I just need to switch to a more amiable species of fish?!
I'm sad as I love Dalmatian and black mollies. It's popularly
reported that black ones are the most frequently aggressive.
<I've not really noticed this to be honest. Big male Sailfins seem far
more boisterous and aggressive. I guess "popularly reported" may mean
than more people keep Black Mollies, and many of those people keep them
in communities with smaller fish like Guppies and Platies, and I'm quite
sure Black Mollies can, do bully them. On the other hand, keep Black
Mollies in a brackish water community with Scats and Monos and they're
right at the bottom of the pecking order.>
I just don't like fish dying from bullying.
<Indeed not.>
A little harmless posturing wouldn't bother me.
<Which in a sense is what the fish want to do -- it's normal social
interaction of the kind we tend to prevent with most other pets. So long
as the fish can avoid being bullied and hurt, then threats and displays
are all part of their normal lives.>
And I don't recall if I fed them once or twice a day, I wonder if that
was an issue.....if they needed more food and were grouchy.
<With Mollies, 12-hour a day algal grazing is the ideal. Failing that, a
little but often. Oh, and one tidbit of relevance here: male livebearers
in the wild are often far less aggressive because they don't have the
time, they need to spend much more time feeding on algae. Why? Because
algae provides little energy, so without feeding for many hours a day,
they would starve. In captivity we give them all the energy they need in
30 seconds' worth of flake -- so they have all the rest of the day to
fight. Maybe create a tank with strong lighting and lots of flat rocks,
so algae grows rapidly and profusely. Minimise your feeding, let the
Mollies feed themselves on the algae (which is what they evolved to do,
and why they have very distinctive mouths). Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Chain loach and Cherry Barb? (salt tolerance question)
11/17/12
Thanks Neil.
<Gill,>
My tank is fine for algae! That's why the mollies are fun to
watch....They're picking around on the bottom or among the plants and
even the walls of the tank. They seem to have more personality
than some of the other types of fish. I'm thinking my 29 gallon is too
small.... unless it's ok to stock only females?
<Yes.>
Or does that cause fights?
<No.>
If I need both sexes than definitely having 10 female and 5 male fish x
3" (sorry, Americans and their inches!) is overstock. If it's
alright to do only females, I could increase the number of mollies
without going over....I could do 10 females. I'd only house mollies with
other brackish.... I'd go to low brackish. The stuff about
driftwood and peat is only if I give up on keeping mollies and switch to
loaches! It seems though, that it would be easier to work with what I
have which is hard water!
<Likely so.>
Regarding snails again:
I read this blog this morning and it sounds like if I have too many
snails it's possible the tank isn't biologically balanced and possible I
need to feed the plants too. The person said snails are no big
deal at all in his/her planted tank!!!
http://www.tropicalfishkeeping.com/freshwater-tropical-fish/snail-eating-fish-wont-eat-shrimps-75752/
<Snails aren't a problem in my planted tank. I'm sure there's 100s of
them, but I hardly see them, and they don't the plants any harm. In any
event, healthy plants generally aren't damaged my Physa and
Melanoides-type snails, though Apple Snails and their relatives may eat
them.>
I didn't feed my plants or use special substrate because I read so many
things suggesting 1) you don't need to feed low light plants in a low
light tank,
<Hmm… not sure this is necessarily true, though I hardly ever fertilise
my planted tanks, and they are stocked with mostly undemanding plants
(Anubias, Crypts, floating Indian Fern, Aponogeton hybrids, etc.).>
and 2) fertilizer is Harmful to many fish and assassin snails too
<Used as directed, fertilisers shouldn't cause any harm.>
and 3) fertilizer increases algae increases snails.
<Possibly, but snails are just as likely to eat fish food and fish waste
as they are algae, so there's probably not much in this either way.>
Do you agree with this, or should I use better substrate and or feed the
plants?
<I do like to use rich substrates, but again, lots of people don't, and
have first-rate results. A lot depends on the plants you're growing. For
the slow-growing epiphytes like Anubias and Java fern, these ignore the
substrate any way, so a little fertiliser added to the water will help
them. On the other hand, Amazon Swords and Crypts do seem to enjoy a
good substrate, or at least a suitable alternative, like fertiliser
pellets pushed into the gravel around them every once a month or so. I'm
a big advocate for choosing plants that suit your style of fishkeeping
rather than trying to change the way you keep fish so your plants are
happy, but each to their own.>
I have fine natural gravel and it seems to have materials in it and the
fish stores all said it was good enough.
<Plain vanilla gravel is inert, and contains virtually no nutrients of
any kind. Over time bacteria cause some degree of fertilisation inside
deep gravel beds (a couple inches or more) so that certain nutrients,
including nitrate and phosphate, are produced from the fish wastes and
other sources of decay. No real surprise there. But iron and magnesium
are two nutrients that are often lacking, and if your plants have yellow
patches on otherwise normal leaves, it's a clue that these sorts of
minerals are missing. On the other hand, if your plants look okay but
grow slowly or outright fail to thrive, limited nutrients aren't nearly
as likely a cause as the wrong environment (typically not enough
light).>
Plants with roots are all potted in the gravel, and the other types are
attached to rocks. But the plants have been nibbled down by snail
babies and look very scrawny now. :-(
Plants: java ferns, Anubias, Crypts, and sparce hornwort...it mostly
died out or perhaps was eaten as the others. I've seen snails on
it.
<If snails are damaging plants, it's almost always the case the plant
was failing anyway. As noted above, the small pest snails don't normally
harm healthy plants.>
I attached a picture so you can see the plant scrawniness. They
were much larger at purchase.
<My guess is that the problems here are mostly to do with lighting. How
many strip lights do you have across the top of the tank? One? Two? If
only one or two, forget about anything light green and fast growing,
such as Hygrophila or Rotala or even Amazon Swords. Instead, focus on
Anubias, Java fern, Java moss, and potted hardy Cryptocoryne species,
especially Cryptocoryne wendtii. These plants are undemanding. Don't ram
Anubias or Java fern into shells or anywhere like that; instead, simply
use black cotton to gentle tie them onto (ideally) bogwood or chemically
inert stones (like slate or lava rock). Buy some floating Indian Fern
for the top of the tank and leave it there. Hornwort might work if this
tank were coldwater, but this coldwater plant "speeds up" in tropical
tanks, and needs very strong lighting if its food production
(photosynthesis) is to keep up with its metabolism (growth). Do also try
and buy reflectors for the tubes, so all the light goes towards the
plants; if that isn't an option, then aluminium foil stuck to the inside
of the hood works okay. Indian Fern provides not just shade but also
helps suppress algae. Oh, and all the plants I've mentioned as suitable
are salt-tolerant, so they're good choices for Mollies.>
((WOW, I just cleaned the tank last week and I scraped partially the
other night, and yet the picture is showing algae again on the glass.
It isn't visible in low lighting but it's obvious in my photo!))
Thanks Again.
I really hope to come up with a final decision this weekend of which
direction to go now with this tank. I super appreciate your input.
I know you know what you're talking about and helps me sort through the
often conflicting opinions in some of the other forums and sources.
Jill
<Glad to help. There are some great planted aquarium forums out there,
so do peruse and solicit second opinions from those who know more about
plants than me! Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Chain loach and Cherry Barb? (salt tolerance question) -
11/17/12
Thanks Neil,
I'll try feeding the plants and use better substrate in the pots.
I bought rough/porous pots to discourage snails. I'll buy a
rougher stone like lava to attach the javas to. I have all the low light
plants... Maybe the store will have Indian fern.
<Do be sure to buy the real thing, Ceratopteris thalictroides. Numerous
other ferns are pushed onto casual aquarists by unscrupulous retailers.>
I'm going to see if the fish store can help with reflectors too or do a
makeshift one like you suggested. The pet store lady suggested little
black Kuhlis that get to 4 inches, they are super cute too,
however....my water is 300 hardness, alk 180, ph 8.4!!! The scary
thing is they're keeping theirs in the same water.
<Can do okay in hard water… but not recommended, no.>
Another guy at the pet store said skunk loaches are amazing for snails,
and tolerate hard water, but I just read they're awfully aggressive.
<Skunk Loaches, yes, semi-aggressive. Okay with barbs of similar size,
but not with smaller fish.>
I hope I can get the plants happier before the snails win!! It
sounds lime that's the solution. by, have a nice weekend.
<Real good. Cheers, Neale.>
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Betta and Loach in 1 gallon? Too small...
10/27/06 Hi guys! Thank you for such a
great website! <Hello there - on behalf of the crew, and most
significantly Bob, you're welcome!> About 3 months ago, I bought
my first Betta fish and have enjoyed him so much! <They are
wonderful fish, aren't they? I currently have 2 males and 1 female
(each housed separately)> He's doing great but I wanted to add a
bottom feeder to clean up the leftover food on the bottom of the tank.
<If you are feeding the proper amount, there should not be any
excess food on the bottom. Bettas have stomachs the size of
their eye; I feed mine no more than 4 pellets a day, occasionally 1-2
Mysis shrimp, or 8-10 small bloodworms (not all at the same time)>
The only place that sells fish, etc in my town is a "big box
store" unfortunately. <Not familiar with this store - sounds
like a big chain, though, and not a specialty fish store?> The
gentleman there recommended a Loach. On the tank it was labeled,
Angencus Boua Loach. I've currently got him quarantined and thought
I better check with you first before adding him to my Betta tank.
<Best to ask first...> The tank is only one gallon. <This is a
fine size for the Betta, but not sufficient for any other livestock,
IMO. Depending on the temperament of the Betta, you *might*
be able to add one or two ghost shrimp, but that's it!> Thanks
to your webpage, I quickly moved up from the tiny bowl I originally
purchased! <Excellent. Bowls are not very good for Bettas
(or any other fish); did you see where Rome outlawed the fishbowl?!>
Will the loach harm my Betta? <I don't think so, but there
isn't room for both...> Should I have bought a Corydoras
instead? <No - no space> Or should I leave well enough alone and
not add a bottom feeder? <That's my suggestion. Feed
less if an abundance of food on the bottom is an issue...> Second
quick question: Do they make an aquarium heater for one gallon tanks?
<I believe you can put a 25watt heater in there...just monitor the
temperature closely with a thermometer.> I have only found heaters
for 2 gallons or more and they emphasize not to use with a one gallon
tank. <I think you should be OK w/ a 25w...> In the winter in
South Carolina, my house will be about 68 degrees F. <Bettas need
stable temperature between 80-82 degrees F, ideally. A large
temperature swing will harm his immune system, making him more
susceptible to disease...not to mention, he'll be just plain
cold!> Thank you so much! Michele <You're welcome.
Jorie>
Re: clown loach, sys., beh.
8/25/06 Hi again,
This
loach had a partner clown loach when he was bought a couple years ago
but they fought a lot and the other didn't make it. I don't
believe it was due to the fighting. His other tank mate died so there
is only a little 2 inch Pleco of some sort in with him. It is a 20 gal
tank. Is this unhealthy for him( stunt his growth or pine in
loneliness) He seems aggressive but not a killer. He is 5 inches now.
<Not enough room for other Botia here... but are social animals,
best kept in small odd numbers where the environment allows.
BobF>
Sherri
Clown Loach sys. - 5/7/2006 Hello everyone,
<<Hi Lisa, this is Lisa!>> I recently just cycled a new
55-gallon tank (fishless cycling). It has been running two
weeks since the cycle completed (Ammonia 0, Nitrites 0, Nitrate almost
negligible (5-10 PPM), real and artificial plants. <<It is not
still cycled unless you are still adding ammonia to feed the
bacteria.>> I'd like to have some clown loaches in this tank
eventually but am concerned due to their susceptibility to ick.
<<They also reach a foot in length and live for more than 2
decades!>> My plan is to introduce them (I'm thinking of
three 3" loaches) into a quarantine tank (10-gallon) for the first
few weeks. <<They won't stay 3' for long. I
would double that tank size, at least, to house 3 Botia macracanthus
for life.>> Even if they get ick there, hopefully, with a raised
temperature and if necessary, medication, I can treat it while
they're in the quarantine tank. <<Heat alone won't really
do it.>> My problem is what happens if they get ick when I move
them to the larger 55 gallon community tank which would most likely
have a slightly lower temperature (even a couple of degrees) than the
quarantine tank? Wouldn't the move, coupled with the
lower temperature change bring about the ick again? <<If you QT
properly, and rule out the introduction of the parasite to your water,
so shouldn't worry about it being 'brought
out'. QT first, and if the temperature is higher in the
QT tank, don't just plop them into colder water (not due to ick,
but stress in general).>> Thanks in advance for any
help/suggestions you may have. Lisa <<A much larger
tank is in order! Good luck. Lisa :)>>
Re: Lonely Goldfish?
4/14/06 Hello again! I hope you don't mind me begging your
indulgence once again. My 'lonely' goldfish is now in
quarantine (I believe the stress of lively new companions didn't
sit well with her - especially as they viewed her veil-tail as a
challenging snack!) <Happens> with fin-rot. Fortunately,
she's doing very well on her own and appears to be much happier.
(I've treated her with salt baths every few days, after starting
her out on anti-fin rot medication -- I now leave her in her tank
without any 'add-ins', doing a ¾ water change every
other day. It's working wonders.) <Ah, good> The new
companions are now in a new aquarium themselves, I'm not sure how
many gallons - but it's massive! -- It could easily accommodate
more fish, but I prefer to let the ones in it already have plenty of
space to grow. <Good> There's just one problem, and
that's the baby loach I bought, on a whim. It was only after I
bought the little fellow (with the pet stores' non-existent advice
on the matter) and did some background research, that I realized
he'd grow up to be a bit of a bully; and a territorial bully at
that! And, surprisingly enough, he has. <What species?> I
don't want this guy in with my goldies, he's grown since I
bought him (several months ago) and has gotten to be a good few inches
long; and his manner has changed dramatically! <... grown this
much... a loach? More likely a CAE... Gyrinocheilus> My folks have a
pond in their back garden -- it's pretty cold, a bit murky (as
outside ponds tend to be), but it does contain several large coy,
frogs, and lots of plant life. Would the little guy be alright in
there? <... what is this species?> It's a good sized pond,
around 4 foot deep -- 8 x 8 feet, and if he could survive quite happily
in there I'd put him in, rather than taking him back to the store.
<I'd return this fish... too much chance of trouble placing it
in your parents pond> A few words of advice would be greatly
appreciated. <Okay... the government and banks are not your
friends> Thank you - once again, Sarah x <Bob
Fenner> Another Clown Loach for a
10Gal? 12/16/05 Hi Crew, <Hi, Pufferpunk here>
First off I would like to thank you for your time. I
currently have a ten gallon tank that has been set up for
six months now. The ammonia level is 0, nitrites
are at 0 and nitrates are <20. I have a five inch tire
track eel, a two inch silver angel, and two one inch clown
loaches. Yes I do know that all of these fish get
rather large and I will be buying a fifty gallon tank in about six
months. The two clown loaches were purchased about a week
ago and are doing great. I read on your site that you should
have at least three clown loaches in a tank because they are very
social schooling fish. I was wondering if it would be a good
idea for me to purchase one more small clown loach for my tank to have
a total of three or if it would be too crowded in my ten
gallon. Any advise would help. <I would definately not
buy any more fish for that tank. Even in a 50g tank, the
fish you have now will get quite large. Clown loaches can
reach a size of close to 12". I have had 2 together for
a long time & they seem happy (they are living in my
125g). It would be nice to have a school of them but even in
my tank, that wouldn't be feasible. Be sure to research
the adult sizes of all your fish before you purchase
them. Also, be sure to do lots of water changes, especially
while in that small tank. I do 50% weekly, on all my
tanks. ~PP> Thank you very much, Stuart
Re: Hypancistrus zebra, to Kissing Gourami, to Clown Loaches
Ah, thanks. Maybe I'll ask Santa for one... <Only if you and the
biz have been good> By the way a couple of fish questions: First, my
kissing Gourami gets very excited at feeding time. He chases the other
fish around, "kissing" them to move them away from the food
as it settles to the bottom. Then, after eating, he seems to kiss or
gulp air (can't tell which) at the surface for 10-20 minutes. Is
this normal? <Yes... these are "outgoing" fish...>
Would clown loaches survive outside in pots in the summertime in San
Diego/Encinitas? Mine are getting pretty big for my 30 gal. <Mmm,
likely yes... but would keep inside... have seen quite large, very old
(decades) clown loaches kept in modest size systems. They don't
seem to suffer for being kept in such systems. Bob Fenner>
Thanks.
Re: ... Clown Loaches OK, Thanks. I'll keep them in.
I'm thinking of constructing some PVC "caves" for the
loaches. What do you think? <A very nice idea> Sort of a loach
habit-trail or a loach motel. I move the rocks around occasionally as
they seem to like change. <Yes, life is. Bob F>
Skunk loaches (10/10/03) <Hi! Ananda
here tonight...> I have a 10 gallon freshwater tank,
established. I have to dwarf gouramis, two zebra Danios, one
common Plec, one red tail black shark (just added) and (now) one
1" skunk loach. <The skunk loach, Botia morleti,
gets to be 4" long; the shark, Epalzeorhynchos bicolor, gets to
almost 5". Hopefully you will have larger quarters for them in the
future.> I had two skunk loaches (same size), however, the shark had
an ick spot. I treated the tank with 1/2 strength Quik Cure. About 12
hours after the initial treatment, one of my skunk loaches was hanging
on top of my heater (I have a submersible). He looked injured on one
side right in the gill area, from about his eye back across the gill. I
want to know if this is a result of the treatment or did the shark
injure him. <My bets are on the shark -- or perhaps the other skunk
loach! This is one of the more aggressive loaches, and with only 10
gallons, that's not a lot of room for them to stake out their
territories. Half-strength Quick Cure *should* be okay for loaches, and
would not have caused a visible exterior injury.> The other loach is
fine. I put him in a brood net in the tank as I don't have a
hospital tank. But, he died within 12 hours. <Presumably, you mean
the injured loach was in the brood net...without a photo of the injury,
it's difficult for me to say what caused it.> I will be
upgrading to a bigger tank, 30 gal, in about a week. I also
have a 30 gal already established and fully stocked. I would
appreciate any advice for these loaches. Thanks, Donna
<Well, they definitely need the space of the 30g tank. Depending on
what fish you have in the other 30g, you might consider moving the
loach or the shark. Unlike many loaches, which prefer to be in groups,
as an adult this loach prefers to be by itself. More on these guys
here: http://loaches.com/species_pages/botia_morleti.html
... By the way...you do plan on keeping the 10 gallon for a hospital
tank, right? :-) --Ananda>
Brackish loaches? (1/6/04) Hello
Bob. I enjoy your site immensely. <Me, too. Ananda here
tonight...> I currently have a system set up for Archerfish,
and as it establishes, I've been researching potential tankmates.
As a beginner to brackish water fishkeeping, I've found it to be
the most informative single resource on the net. <So did I.
Thanks!> I do however have a few questions that aren't
covered on the site: (My substrate is an even mix of sand and
crushed coral, with a small amount of smooth pebble-sized gravel. The
specific gravity is about 1.005, and the temp is 80F) Your
section on brackish fishes mentions that loaches, and in particular the
Clown Loach are happy in a brackish environment. However, I've
found other resources that say loaches are extremely salt-intolerant.
Do you know what the real story is? <I believe that clown
loaches may venture into brackish water, but do not stay there
long-term.... Most other sources say *all* loaches are salt-intolerant,
and I know that's not the case (more on that in a bit). I have
clown loaches, but haven't had the guts to try turning their tank
into a brackish system.> I've always liked loaches in my
freshwater community tanks, so I'd like to add a few. If they do
tolerate salt, can you tell me what their upper limit of salinity
is? <I know they will tolerate 1.003 for at least a few weeks
-- a friend treated her loaches for Ich by adding freshwater salt,
adding it slowly (over a couple of days) until she got to 1.003, and
increasing their tank temp to about 86. I have heard of people
who've had success keeping yo-yo loaches, Botia almorhae (formerly
B. lohachata) in systems up to 1.006.> I'm also a big fan
of mollusks, and apparently "freshwater" clams such as
Corbicula fluminea can adapt to fairly high levels of salinity. Do you
have any experience or comments on keeping these clams (or similar
species) in an aquarium setting? <I haven't tried it.
However, I've heard that freshwater mollusks can be disease
carriers.> Also, I've been searching for a type of snail
that would be suitable for such an environment. Everything I can find
on the net seems to be purely freshwater or marine. Any
suggestions? <Malaysian trumpet snails, also called cone
snails, do just fine in brackish systems. They will reproduce to
near-plague proportions if you give them a chance. Going from the other
end of the spectrum, I've heard that some turbo snails can be
adapted to brackish systems. Doing so, however, is a matter of weeks,
if not months. And Pufferpunk recently got some freshwater Nassarius
snails, so they, too could be adapted. Again, however, the process
would be slow.> Thanks in advance, -Brian
<You're quite welcome. Do check out the WWM brackish forum at
http://wetwebfotos.com/talk
--Ananda> Chuck Clowns Around with the loaches I have a
90 gallon show tank with discus, clown loaches and Bushynosed Plecos.
It is decorated with wood and single piece of holey stone which gives
the loaches many hiding places. The substrate is typical natural
colored aquarium gravel. I was considering removing the gravel and
leaving the tank bare bottomed so I could keep it very clean. Is that
going to be a problem for the clown loaches? < I would not
remove all the gravel. I would leave about 1/2 inch to 3/4 of an inch
of gravel or fine sand. There are bacteria living on the gravel that
help break down the fishes waste. If you removed all the gravel you
would probably encounter big ammonia spikes every time you changed your
filter and that would affect the entire tank. I would service the
filter once every two weeks and then gravel vac the substrate on
alternate weeks.-Chuck> James Nyman
Looking for a Dojo Loach
I was considering a Dojo Loach (possibly gold)
for a 29g and have seen some widely ranging information on these in
regards to their size. I have seen postings stating their
max aquarium size anywhere from 15cm upwards of 20inches. In
a "typical" aquarium what size should I expect one of these
to grow, and would it outgrow a 29g and if so in how long? <
Generally Dojo's are bottom loving catfish that spend all their
time sifting through fine sand for something to eat. Fine well rounded
sand is best because coarse materials will be abrasive to the mouth and
eyes. Go to planetcatfish.com and see all the Dojo's that are out
there. Many species are referred to as Dojo's. Most in the hobby
only get around 8 inches while the gold variety is smaller around 4
inches.> Also I have read that they like to burrow and bury
themselves. I am concerned about this as I have a crushed
coral substrate which would not be good. I read they like
sandy bottoms which would go with the burrowing. I do have
lots of cover and live plants so at least the layout should be
acceptable. < Fine sand is the only way to go or else you will
become an expert in wound control.-Chuck> Patrick
Golden Dojos/Weatherfish Thank you so much for your advice.
<Welcome> I will not get any more Dojos! <I see> The tank
was given to me by a friend who moved and could no longer keep it. He
gave me no instruction on caring for it other than to feed the fish, as
he figured he would come by to do the maintenance (which didn't
happen) and when I went away on a 1 month trip, everyone died (the tank
was beyond disgustingly filthy when I returned), so, I started over and
researched how to maintain a tank on the net. However, at
the local fish store, I was never informed as to the size the knifes
would get, but since I like them so much, I will move them to their own
tank when they get bigger. <...> The cichlids I have are 2
electric blue cichlids, 2 Neolamprologus sexfasciatus gold, 2 tiger
Oscars. Since the Knifes will need their own tank eventually
and the Oscars will too, would they work in their own tank together?
<For a short while perhaps (months)> Both the Oscars and the
Knifes are my favorites. <These two could live together... but the
Africans, no> Since the Dojos are fine and everyone else is happy
and healthy, I guess my main question is now, how do I lower my
nitrates if the water changes aren't doing the trick? <A few
ways... the simplest is by regular good-sized water changes... like 20%
a week... but using live plants, deep, large gravel, chemical
filtrants... and careful feeding should help> You have a great site,
and are very generous with your time in answering everyone's
questions. Thank you again! Tara <Again, you're very
welcome. Excelsior! Bob Fenner>
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