FAQs on Dwarf Ram Cichlid
Compatibility
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Diff. Ram species not getting along 3/17/17
I have 2 male 1 female Bolivian Rams and a male German Blue ram in the same tank
it seams the German Blue ram is being aggressive towards the Bolivian Rams any
advice what to do
<I'd remove the Blue Ram to elsewhere. UNLESS you have enough room here, there
will be only further trouble. Bob Fenner>
Bonded GBR pair not getting along so well
5/17/16
Hello crew,
<Jacob>
I've been dealing with an issue that I haven't been able to find described
anywhere on the net, at least with the same sorts of details. I'm aware that it
is not so uncommon for German Blue Rams (Mikrogeophagus ramirezi) to get a bit
nippy and territorial with each other, especially when a male is getting to know
a female. My issue is a little bit different, though.
First, some background:
This is a 29 gallon aquarium, 30" long. Both GBR have been in the tank for
roughly 8 months, they were around 3 months old when added. Tankmates include 7
Rummynose tetra (Hemigrammus bleheri), 10 Corydoras habrosus
(largest is just a hint over 1" SL), and a common Bristlenose Pleco (female,
about 3.25" SL). They were all added to this tank within a week or so of each
other. Tank is filtered by an Aquaclear 70 hang-on-back filter with Seachem
Matrix bio-media and Seachem Purigen. There is an air-powered sponge filter as
well as a just-in-case measure.
Tank is heavily planted, with an Amazon sword about half the width of the tank
on one side that I keep trimmed as a means to keep it from taking over any
further. There are several pieces of driftwood of various sizes as well as a
Pleco cave (elongated clay pot-esque hidey-hole). There is a Vesuvius sword
(Echinodorus angustifolia variant), Myriophyllum mattogrossense, and some
patches of Christmas moss as well. In other words, there are a lot of
things to explore, broken sight lines, and hiding places.
Parameters are 79 degrees Fahrenheit, 6.2-6.5 pH, 0 ammonia/nitrite, and
nitrates that vary from 0-15ppm (always zero without adding fertilizers).
GH 4 degrees, kH 1-3 depending on normal variance in my tap and time since water
change. I do a 50% water change every week to avoid any nutrient
buildups from plant fertilizers.
<Mmm; I'd likely raise the temp. here to low 80's F.>
*Back to my problem: *The GBR pair spawned the day they were introduced 8 months
ago.
<? At three mo.s of age?>
I had purchased the female at a local chain pet store and had planned to go to
another to grab a male. Unfortunately, the other pet shop sold the male in the
time between my scoping out the availability and picking it up. No matter, I
bought my male from an online breeder who also taught me a thing or two about
hormone injections in rams. I was prepared for my store-bought female to perhaps
not be receptive to the more naturally-bred male, but to my surprise they hit it
off immediately. In the intervening time, they have spawned at least 10 more
times, always reaching the free swimming stage since try #5 or so. I suspect the
tetras or filter intake are doing in the fry.
<I'd add a sponge filter... turn off the power filter/s at these times>
In the first 6 months of owning this pair, they were two peas in a pod, whether
in mating mode or not. They have no
problem getting food since these tetras are mid-to-bottom feeders in a similar
way to the rams. Foods offered include New Life Spectrum Thera+A, Omega One Kelp
Pellets (mostly as a supplement to Pleco's diet and to make sure there is some
plant material for the various omnivores), blanched zucchini (staple diet for
Pleco), and several frozen foods like Spirulina brine shrimp, mysis shrimp, and
the rare bloodworm. They are fed live blackworms twice a week when my LFS has
them in stock.
Around mid-March, I noticed my female with clamped fins and—to the extent the
hormone-injected rams can have this—washed out colors. I don't normally think
much of the occasional odd behavior of course, but this was paired
with a lot of hiding and some chasing from the male. This has since become a
fairly common pattern, though she isn't always clamped by any means but very
typically pale. She hides from the male often and he chases her all over the
place. They have spawned twice since this behavior began and their behavior and
colors go back to normal in the immediate days pre-spawning and while dealing
with the eggs/fry. No matter their general behavior, they both eagerly accept
food as normal. My main concern is that I have seen her have fin damage a few
times and with the latest iteration I figured I better get some outside input. I
have seen her caudal fin missing a roughly 2mm by 2mm patch, then after the
caudal fin healed up she lost about half the length of one of her pelvic fins.
She has been acting normal<ly> and looking ready to spawn for the past few days,
but I just noticed that she has a 2mm by 2mm patch missing from one of her
pectoral fins, in this case as clear as ever that the area was nibbled off.
There are a couple nicks in her caudal fin as well.
At this point, I'm unsure of what to do about these things, especially since she
seems to constantly bounce back and eventually does spawn. I know some cichlids
do tend to stress the female to induce spawning, though it clearly wasn't needed
early in this pair's relationship! I just don't want the female to end up
actually dying if the male decides to step up his tactics.
Thanks in advance,
Jacob
<Well; not much I would do differently here. Cichlids are often damaged in the
wild... by predator tries as well as conspecific interactions; particularly as
regards reproductive behavior. I would not treat the fish/es, but just elevate
the temp. here as mentioned. Am sharing this w/ Neale here for his independent
response. Bob Fenner>
Bonded GBR pair not getting along so well /Neale's go
5/17/16
Hello crew,
<Jacob,>
I've been dealing with an issue that I haven't been able to find described
anywhere on the net, at least with the same sorts of details. I'm aware that it
is not so uncommon for German Blue Rams (Mikrogeophagus ramirezi) to get a bit
nippy and territorial with each other, especially when a male is getting to know
a female. My issue is a little bit different, though. First, some background:
This is a 29 gallon aquarium, 30" long. Both GBR have been in the tank for
roughly 8 months, they were around 3 months old when added. Tankmates include 7
Rummynose tetra (Hemigrammus bleheri), 10 Corydoras habrosus (largest is just a
hint over 1" SL), and a common Bristlenose Pleco (female, about 3.25" SL). They
were all added to this tank within a week or so of each other. Tank is filtered
by an Aquaclear 70 hang-on-back filter with Seachem Matrix bio-media and Seachem
Purigen. There is an air-powered sponge filter as well as a just-in-case
measure.
<Do review stocking; the required temperature range for Rams, 28-30 C/82-86 F,
is well above that of, in particular, Corydoras habrosus. In cooler water their
health is compromised, and more to the point in this situation, they're less
likely to spawn. Plus, once Mikrogeophagus ramirezi get settled and spawning,
their territorial aggression tends to damage even medium-sized Corydoras, though
conceivably they'd ignore the midwater swimming pygmy species. I'd still be
watching them closely.>
Tank is heavily planted, with an Amazon sword about half the width of the tank
on one side that I keep trimmed as a means to keep it from taking over any
further. There are several pieces of driftwood of various sizes as well as a
Pleco cave (elongated clay pot-esque hidey-hole). There is a Vesuvius sword
(Echinodorus angustifolia variant), Myriophyllum mattogrossense, and some
patches of Christmas moss as well. In other words, there are a lot of things to
explore, broken sight lines, and hiding places.
<Good.>
Parameters are 79 degrees Fahrenheit, 6.2-6.5 pH, 0 ammonia/nitrite, and
nitrates that vary from 0-15ppm (always zero without adding fertilizers). GH 4
degrees, kH 1-3 depending on normal variance in my tap and time since water
change. I do a 50% water change every week to avoid any nutrient buildups from
plant fertilizers.
<All sounds good.>
Back to my problem: The GBR pair spawned the day they were introduced 8 months
ago. I had purchased the female at a local chain pet store and had planned to go
to another to grab a male. Unfortunately, the other pet shop sold the male in
the time between my scoping out the availability and picking it up. No matter, I
bought my male from an online breeder who also taught me a thing or two about
hormone injections in rams. I was prepared for my store-bought female to perhaps
not be receptive to the more naturally-bred male, but to my surprise they hit it
off immediately. In the intervening time, they have spawned at least 10 more
times, always reaching the free swimming stage since try #5 or so. I suspect the
tetras or filter intake are doing in the fry. In the first 6 months of owning
this pair, they were two peas in a pod, whether in mating mode or not. They have
no problem getting food since these tetras are mid-to-bottom feeders in a
similar way to the rams. Foods offered include New Life Spectrum Thera+A, Omega
One Kelp Pellets (mostly as a supplement to Pleco's diet and to make sure there
is some plant material for the various omnivores), blanched zucchini (staple
diet for Pleco), and several frozen foods like Spirulina brine shrimp, mysis
shrimp, and the rare bloodworm. They are fed live blackworms twice a week when
my LFS has them in stock.
<Understood.>
Around mid-March, I noticed my female with clamped fins and—to the extent the
hormone-injected rams can have this—washed out colors. I don't normally think
much of the occasional odd behavior of course, but this was paired with a lot of
hiding and some chasing from the male. This has since become a fairly common
pattern, though she isn't always clamped by any means but very typically pale.
She hides from the male often and he chases her all over the place. They have
spawned twice since this behavior began and their behavior and colors go back to
normal in the immediate days pre-spawning and while dealing with the eggs/fry.
No matter their general behavior, they both eagerly accept food as normal. My
main concern is that I have seen her have fin damage a few times and with the
latest iteration I figured I better get some outside input. I have seen her
caudal fin missing a roughly 2mm by 2mm patch, then after the caudal fin healed
up she lost about half the length of one of her pelvic fins. She has been acting
normal and looking ready to spawn for the past few days, but I just noticed that
she has a 2mm by 2mm patch missing from one of her pectoral fins, in this case
as clear as ever that the area was nibbled off. There are a couple nicks in her
caudal fin as well.
<Could indicate fighting, especially if the male is "nipping" at her vent, as
some cichlids are wont to do.>
At this point, I'm unsure of what to do about these things, especially since she
seems to constantly bounce back and eventually does spawn. I know some cichlids
do tend to stress the female to induce spawning, though it clearly wasn't needed
early in this pair's relationship! I just don't want the female to end up
actually dying if the male decides to step up his tactics.
<I think your concern here is valid. I'd start by separating them. Get the
female fed well for 6-8 weeks so she puts on some fat. In fish, each batch of
egg production is closely related to how well the female has recovered from the
last. So you need to do what old school fishkeepers called "conditioning" the
female; bringing her into spawning condition. Once that's done, try introducing
them to a spawning tank with minimal decor but a few suitable spawning sites.
Just because two cichlids are sold as a pair it doesn't mean they are a pair, or
for that matter, there's no reason two fish that paired off one time should
happily pair off again. Just doesn't work like that. Within the pair the two
fish will be continually "testing" each other, and if you don't condition the
female, it's easy for her to "fail" the male's test. In the wild he'd drive her
off and try to attract another female, but in an aquarium that's not always an
option. Do try reviewing some of the older aquarium books on fishkeeping and
breeding. Those authors took a lot less for granted, and more to the point, were
more reliant on breeding their fish because buying more of a particular species
tropical fish was by no means a certainty. Finally, do recognise that the Blue
Ram is hopelessly inbred, and if it's anything like the Electric Blue Jack
Dempsey, can be expected to have much lower fertility than the wild fish.>
Thanks in advance,
Jacob
<Welcome, Neale.>
Mixing a Bolivian Ram and Apistogramma 10/5/13
Hi crew,
<Dunc>
Thanks for reading my email.
<Sure>
Is ridiculous to think that a single, reasonably-tempered Bolivian Ram
could share a 3ft, 180L community tank with 1m and 2f Apistogramma
agassizi, assuming enough hiding spots (caves, wood), moderate planting
(Vallisneria, java fern, Amazon sword and floating Frogbit), temp 28 deg
C, GH/KH 3-4, pH 7.2ish and Nitrogenous waste where it should be (0, 0,
<20)?
<Not ridiculous. I'd bet they'd cohabitate>
One 20% water change per week/week and a half is carried out.
<Mmm, every week if you have the water>
There's a male Apisto in there as of today - a bit of ram chasing Apisto
but nothing serious yet - I will monitor.
I'd love the look of the bulky Ram co-habitating with the dainty Apistos
if possible.
I have removed a male P. taeniatus already, as though he went pretty
easy on the ram for a year, I think I'd be pushing it with anything
else.
Other tank inhabitants are:
- 19 x Cardinal Tetra (who fin-nipped my Pearl Gourami into another
tank!)
- 1 x Bristlenose Ancistrus (a bit feisty) - would this eat eggs/fry of
the proposed cichlid harem?
<Might>
- 1 x female 3-spot Gourami (generally well-behaved)
- 3 x Amano shrimp (big, healthy)
On another note, could two pairs of different Apisto species (agassizi
and
trifasciatus) share this space - a possible future project.
<Should be able to fit in two pair of this genus in this size, shape
tank>
Cheers and thanks!
Duncan.
<Welcome, Bob Fenner>
Mixing a Bolivian Ram and Apistogramma 10/5/13
Hey crew, not sure if the below made it through from Thurs night., so
I've included it below.
<Ah, did. I just "saved" overnight, hoping Neale (in the UK) would pick
up.
BobF>
Thanks!
Duncan.
Re: Mixing a Bolivian Ram and Apistogramma /Neale's further
input
10/5/13
<<I don't disagree with Bob, but would caution you that -- as
always with cichlids -- there are no guarantees so far as social
behaviour goes!
Despite being much bigger, a single female Bolivian Ram should not be
much of a threat to a pair of robust Apistogramma such as A.
cacatuoides, but a male (or worse, a pair) of Bolivian Rams might be a
"real and present danger" to any Apistogramma kept with them in a small
aquarium. On the whole Apistogramma tend to occupy smaller territories
towards the back of the tank, while Bolivian Rams are much bolder fish
that hang about at the front of the aquarium, so with luck they'll
largely ignore each other if the tank is adequately large and well
decorated with things to break up lines of sight. Mixing Apistogramma
species works well, assuming the species chosen share similar
requirements (there is some variation re: temperature for example) but
you do of course run the risk of hybridisation. Finally, I would not mix
any dwarf cichlid with Loricariid catfish if my goal was rearing fry.
While cichlids generally make excellent guardians by day, they are
almost blind at night, and that is when catfish will view their nests as
prime feeding grounds! There's a suggestion that some cichlid species
move eggs from one nest to another precisely because this makes it
harder for catfish to find their eggs, and it's only a small step from
moving eggs by mouth to become true mouthbrooders, which is an even
better way to keep their eggs safe. Cheers, Neale.>>
Keeping Malaysian Trumpet Snails with Blue
Rams 9/5.5/11
Hey, Crew! I have a quick question for you! Right now I have Blue Rams,
Harlequin Rasbora, and Marbled Hatchets in my 30 gallon aquarium.
I'm planting it at the end of this week with some low light plants.
I also have some Malaysian trumpet snails coming in the mail later this
week to help stir up my sand substrate. Basically, my question is what
is the lowest pH the MTS can live in?
<Around pH 6.5, maybe a bit less.>
I've heard they're kind of hard to kill. I keep my water
anywhere from 6.4-6.8 pH-wise, and want to know if this would be ok for
the MTS. I know they like hard, alkaline water but I keep mine soft and
acidic for my Rams, as they take precedence for me. I want to know the
lowest pH I can keep them at basically, and if they would be ok with my
current parameters. If not, what pH should I raise it to?
Thank you, Charles
<I'd try a few snails and see what happens. In soft water they
tend to have thin, brittle shells, but the snails themselves seem
unharmed. Low pH levels promote erosion of the shells, but provided the
pH isn't below 6.5, they can do okay. If your water is too soft and
acidic, you'll simply see your snails fail to thrive, and
that'll be that. There are better choices for this aquarium when it
comes to sand sifters, perhaps Kuhli Loaches or Banjo Catfish,
depending on the temperature. Cheers, Neale.>
Help: Shyness of Blue Rams and Harlequin
Rasbora temp compatibility
Temp Compatibility For Ram Tankmates 9/1/11
Sorry for the long-winded title!
First, I'd just like to say that I am incredibly impressed with
your site.
It is one of the most detailed, comprehensive Aquarium sources I've
ever come across. Thank you for making it so easily accessible to
hobbyists that didn't have this sort of stuff available ten to
twenty years ago.
It's truly a godsend.
< Thank you for your kind words.>
Anyway, I'm starting my tank back up again, and luckily it was
already cycled by four Harlequin Rasbora. It's been up and running
for about two years. I've kept Blue Rams in the past, however have
never been truly successful with them. This time I'm determined.
I've been reading about them constantly. One thing that I know I
never accounted for before was temperature. I would always keep them
around 77F to make the community happy. Not this time. As soon as I got
them into the tank, the water went up to 80F. My question is will this
temperature be ok for the Harlequin Rasboras already in there?
< They should handle 80 F with no problem.>
I plan to get 4 more of them, 6 Cory cats, and a Dwarf Gourami too.
Would all of these fish be ok at this temperature?
< All of these fish would be fine at that temp.>
The Harlequin's seem ok right now, schooling back and forth like
they always do. I know the blue rams would like a temp closer to 82F,
but I want to make it comfortable for the community, so would 80F be ok
for the aforementioned fish?
< When you increase the water temperature the oxygen carrying
capacity of the water goes down. Increase the aeration to compensate
for the increased temps and everything should be fine.>
Secondly, my rams are so shy! I find it adorable, however I'd love
to see them come out and swim around the tank when I'm around. When
I watch the tank form across the room (it's a 30g in my bedroom),
they're picking through the sand happy as can be, swimming with the
Rasboras, and seem generally carefree. However, as soon as I move or
approach the tank, they flee and hide behind the many artificial plants
I have in the tank. Will this get better in time, and is there anything
I can do to speed it up?
< When you get the additional fish they will come up to the top of
the tank to be fed. This will get the rams to also see you as the food
monitor and they will soon learn to come out to be fed.
Too.-Chuck>They seem to be eating, not as much as I'd like,
though, but they do seem to be eating (I'll be picking up some live
or frozen blood worms at the LFS next week on my trip there).
Thanks for any help, and more importantly thanks for hanging in there
while reading this email. I know I tend to drone on. Thanks again!
Charles
re: Help: Shyness of Blue Rams and Harlequin Rasbora temp
compatibility
Rams Start to Color Up 9/2/11
Thank you so much for the prompt reply! I'm relieved I can keep
them all together. I have two more quick questions, if you don't
mind. The two Rams I have are about 1.25" to 1.5" long, I
wouldn't think they are much larger than that. I know they can
reach about 3", but mine are much paler than pictures I see
online. They have colored up some, but is it possible that their color
will intensify once I start feeding them frozen food and they get
older?
< As your fish become more comfortable in their surroundings they
will get more color. Older fish have more color than younger
fish.>
Also, my two Rams often square up with each other when they run into
one another. Sometimes they'll even lip-lock. However, their
coloring reminds me much more of a female than a male. Could these two
females be showing territorial behavior like the males do? Or are they
just males who haven't quite colored up yet? Thanks so much.
Charles
< Rams are very territorial like many cichlids. Their behaviour
could be related to spawning but most likely just establishing
territories.-Chuck>
re: Help: Shyness of Blue Rams and Harlequin Rasbora temp
compatibility 9/3/11
Thanks again for the fast reply! Well, it appears I have another
problem.
Today I went to the LFS and picked out 6 green aeneus Cory cats. Upon
putting them in the 36"x12"x18" aquarium, both of the
rams have been non-stop harassing the Cory's.
<Yes, very common. Would have warned you of this! I've mentioned
several times on this site that Mikrogeophagus don't always cohabit
with catfish, and in any case, Mikrogeophagus ramirezi needs much
warmer water than (most) Corydoras prefer. Paul Loiselle describes one
situation where the Ram Cichlids bite the eyes off the poor
Corydoras!>
The LFS, a forum I go to, and you guys all said they would be fine
together,
<Not me!>
so this is very shocking to me. Will this stop in time, or is it
something I should be worried about? What should I do? Thanks so
much.
<Your cichlids view the Corydoras as threats to their brood, and are
acting accordingly. There's no solution beyond separating them.
Cheers, Neale.>
re: Help: Shyness of Blue Rams and Harlequin Rasbora temp
compatibility
Upper Tank Mate Recommendations 9/4/11
Sorry for the double email, but I've decided that I'm going to
be taking the Cory cats to the LFS tomorrow and try to exchange them
for a different fish. I want a top dwelling fish. What do you think
would go good in a 30g (36" x 12") with 2 German Blue Rams
and 8 Harlequin Rasbora? I'm trying to balance out the look of the
tank. Thanks for any help!!
< South American hatchet fish or splashing tetras are always found
not too far from the surface.-Chuck>
Compatibility and general questions. Rams
and Barbs 12/27/09
Hello all WWM crew,
<Hi Andy>
It has been a while since I've last contacted for your support,
which I guess is a good thing. Thanks to all your efforts, and a
special thanks to Neale, my Arowana and L-25 Scarlet Pleco tank have
been very successful approximately three years now and hopefully many
more to come. But I do come here with a few questions in mind and hope
that you guys could clear things up for me.
<Mmm, Neale's "marked out" presently. I think he's
visiting in the States... Omaha, NE...>
Aside from my love for monster oddball fish, I am starting to find a
great interest in community tanks and aquaria. I currently have a 55
gallon tank that houses 8 roseline sharks (Puntius denisonii).
<Beauts>
The other day, a friend of mine gave me four German Blue Rams
(Papiliochromis ramirezi).
Now I know that they require totally different water parameters, but
didn't want to see them flushed down the toilet. Anyhow, was
wondering if you have any ideas how these two will coexist.
<Mmm, can... with something middling twixt their "likes"
water quality-wise...>
I set my tank's temp. at 75 degrees F. to find a median point.
<Mmm, I'd raise this closer to 80>
Correct me if I am wrong, but the denisonii requires cooler temps,
where as the rams require a warmer temp?
<Yes>
My waters Ph is around 7.4 and hopefully that will be tolerable.
<I'd shoot for something more neutral... closer to 7.0>
Secondly, is it normal for both species to school together?
<No, but these two are both products of successive captive
breeding... so, can tolerate a wider range of circumstances, likely
show more "community" type behavior>
It is an amazing sight, as the rams have settled in and now are
schooling with the roselines. Is this normal behavior and is there any
chance of aggression against each other?
<Not much chance here>
The rams are rather small and young in age, but maybe once they realize
they are cichlids, they will start to attack the sharks? Or am I just
worrying too much?
<Barbs, not "minnow" sharks, and no sense worrying>
I would also like to ask if fish stress out if they don't receive
enough sleep?
<I do think so>
Reason I ask is because my Arowana tank is in my room and I usually
tend to stay up really late, sometimes to the early morning hours. Even
with my lights off, if my television is on, they will stay awake.
Reason I know they do sleep is when/if I leave for a couple hours, in
which the room is completely dark, upon my return they are usually
shocked/stunned/light-colored/unresponsive for a couple of minutes
until they pull through. Any harm done if I've deprived them of
their sleep?
<Might be, as mentioned. I would leave some small light on in the
room at all times to prevent the "spooking">
One last question. I'm sure my question varies greatly depending on
the species of fish, but does fish have a good memory?
<Some species do, others don't appear to>
I've always been curious of this. For example, my Pleco has a cave
he calls home right now. If I move him to another tank, for say a
couple months and he finds a new home, upon his return, will he likely
find he previous home right away?
<Yes>
Reason I ask is because I might be taking a vacation for a few months,
all the while having another family member taking care of the tanks
with strict directions and instructions. Was wondering upon my return,
if they will remember me, especially my Arowana. As of right now,
I'm the only one that he/she responds to when I approach the
tank.
I've blabbered excessively with my ridiculous questions. Once
again, thanks greatly for all your efforts and responses. It means a
lot to me, as well as many others out there. Have a great day, and
happy holidays to all the WWM crew.
Andy
<And to you and yours Andy. Bob Fenner>
Mikrogeophagus altispinosus stocking and
compatibility 10/21/08
Dear Crew,
I am currently planning which inhabitants to keep in a 46 Gallon
bow-front (36 in. long x 16 in. at the widest x 20 in. deep) that I am
going to plant well with low-light plants and provide 2-2.5 watts per
gallon of lighting. The my tap water has pH of about 8.0 with GH and
dKH around 8 each. I will keep the temperature around 78-80F. I wrote
previously asking about Betta imbellis and Melanotaenia praecox. After
receiving Neale's advice I have decided on trying (2+)
Mikrogeophagus altispinosus (Bolivian Rams) and either (7-9)M. praecox
or (9-11)Trigonostigma espei and (~5)Gasteropelecus sternicla (Silver
Hatchetfish) for the top level. Would the M. praecox work with the M.
altispinosus or are they too active for the Rams?
<Should be fine assuming the water is reasonably deep.>
I know Neale has suggested the T. espei before as a ditherfish for the
Rams, but I'm still drawn to the Rainbowfish. Next, I have read
that M. altispinosus form monogamous pairs, is it possible to keep more
than 1 pair in a tank the
size of mine?
<Yes, though there may be squabbling over nesting sites, so decorate
the tank with care.>
I think with plants and driftwood/rocks I could set up different areas
of the tank for them to make territories. However, I would be concerned
that if I had a pair of Rams at either end of the tank the other fish
would have nowhere to run if the Rams were protecting their young. One
final question, I would like to keep Red Cherry Shrimp and Trumpet
snails in this tank as well. Would either of these survive with the
Rams?
<The snails will be fine. The shrimps more of a gamble, but
they're inexpensive and worth a shot.>
I've read the M. altispinosus eat insects and crustaceans and
possibly snails as well. What are your thoughts on keeping these
species together?
<Mikrogeophagus are, as their name translates, "small earth
eaters", and feed primarily by sifting sand. From that they
extract algae, organic detritus, and small invertebrates, particularly
insect larvae. They aren't predators as such, and shrimps up in the
plants should be fine. It's worth making the point that like most
cichlids in the hobby, aquarists often underestimate the degree to
which these fish eat plant material and algae in the wild.>
As always, thank you for your insight and experience.
Evan
<Cheers, Neale.>
Freshwater Sump??? 7/10/08 Hello...I feel
like I should know all y'all on a first name basis, I read
constantly on your awesome site and have learned sooo much...I work in
the fish department of my LFS and take my laptop to work with me so if
a customer has questions I cannot answer, I can immediately go to wwm
to look for the correct solution for them. I have recently bought a 125
All-Glass system and am planning on setting it up as a planted tank for
Dwarf SA Cichlids, such as Apistogrammas, Borleyii (sp?) and German
Rams. From what I have read and understood, these species should get
along well in a tank of this size with lots of plants and bogwood and
rock. Ok, my concern is this... This tank is pre-drilled as I had
originally purchased it to set up as a reef tank, but have since
changed my mind since I already have a 90 gal reef. Can a sump be
utilized with a planted tank? I looked and looked in your freshwater
filtration section and either overlooked it or overlooked it. I can
think of no reason not to use the sump but then I don't have the
answers...I am one of those misleading LFS people, you know!!! Eagerly
await your reply, Thanks in advance for being there and making your
site and yourselves available to all of us, I have typed up sheets of
paper with wetwebmedia.com on it and cut it up into slips that I give
to customers so they can have access to your wonderful site. Thanks
again for being there. Rj <Greetings, and thanks for the kind words.
There is nothing wrong with use sump-equipped tanks in freshwater
aquaria. Works very well in fact, providing more space for biological
filtration or the use of calcareous rubble to raise carbonate hardness
required for Rift Valley cichlids. The only real issue is that the more
splashing there is, the more CO2 is driven off, and this can cause you
problems if you are using CO2 in a planted tank. Now, one observation I
will make is that Mikrogeophagus ramirezi (such as "German Blue
Rams") are not compatible with Apistogramma. There are several
issues, but the two most important are differences in preferred
temperature and differences in water chemistry. Apistogramma prefer
moderate temperature (around 24-26 C) and slightly acidic to neutral,
soft to moderately hard water depending on the species. By contrast
Mikrogeophagus ramirezi does not do well in anything other than hot
(around 28 C) water that is very soft and acidic. The mortality rate of
Mikrogeophagus ramirezi is incredibly high in captivity, and I simply
don't recommend them any more unless you have a special
"hot" aquarium for them and can source locally bred or
wild-caught stock. So either stick with your Apistogramma, or else add
something like the wonderfully reliable Bolivian Ram Mikrogeophagus
altispinosus. Cheers, Neale.>
Starting a soft water tank, need help
on choosing inhabitants, order of addition 4/15/08 I am working
with my wife to set up a soft water tank. It is a 55 gallon tank. I am
mixing RO/DI water with dechlorinated tap water. There are plenty of
artificial plants as well as driftwood and some rocks. The centerpiece
will be dwarf rams. We also plan to have some Cory cats and a schooling
fish. <Hmm... be careful: Mikrogeophagus ramirezi require warmer
water than most Corydoras species, and warmer water than many tetras
appreciate. If you keep these other fish at the required 28-30 degrees
C, they will be stressed and potentially experience a much shorter
lifespan. Among the Corydoras, Corydoras sterbai is the only common
species that does *really* well in warm water aquaria, and is routinely
kept with Discus. Do also remember Mikrogeophagus have been reported to
bite the eyes from Corydoras catfish; they are not a recommended
combination. My experience of Corydoras is that they are absolutely
hopeless at learning about territories, and this makes them difficult
to keep with territorial cichlids.> We are trying to decide on what
schooling fish to keep . . . Neons, cardinals, or zebra Danios. Reading
over the site, it looks like the Neons prefer cooler water than the
rams, and carry the risk of neon tetra disease. How significant is that
risk? <Danios and Neons definitely need cooler water than Rams;
around 20 C is ideal for Danios, and around 22 C for Neons. So neither
is a viable option. Cardinals do well as 28 C, so make the ideal
choice. Another good choice would be the Lambchop Rasbora Trigonostigma
espei (as opposed to the cooler water Harlequin Rasbora Trigonostigma
heteromorpha). Finally, consider the Marbled Hatchetfish Carnegiella
strigata, which also enjoys quite warm water.> On the other hand,
reading about cardinals, it seems they tend to be difficult to get
acclimated, but they are hardy once successfully introduced. Is that a
correct impression? If so, what are your suggestions for successful
acclimation? I believe the article on your site recommends a drip
acclimation. Is that recommended? <Cardinals are generally hardier
than Neons once acclimated, and a thousand times easier to keep than
the terribly poor quality Rams on the market these days. So I'd
worry more about the Rams than the Cardinals! In any case, if you are
adjusting fish from maintenance in hard water aquaria (e.g., at the
shop) to soft water in your home aquarium, then yes, a drip method
acclimating the fish across an hour or so would work. Even better would
be keeping the tank medium hard, neutral pH while you stock it, and
then soften it across a week or two using water changes once you're
done. A month or so as a medium hard water aquarium would do your fish
no harm, especially if the temperature and water quality are
optimal.> If the cardinals and tetras are too likely to perish, we
will probably go with the zebra Danios instead. <Not a good choice
at all; Danios come from fast, cool water environments.> What do you
recommend for stocking? I was thinking 8 Corys, 12 schooling fish, 6
rams. Could we or should we add more of the schooling fish or Cory
cats? Are odd numbers or even numbers preferable for any of the fish we
plan to keep? <Numbers sound fine. Corydoras and most schooling fish
behave themselves impeccably once decent numbers are kept, so don't
worry too much about odd/even numbers. As for the Rams, do try and keep
more females than males, but failing that, don't overcrowd and
ensure everyone has their own hiding place.> Finally, is there a
preferred order of addition? I was considering schooling fish, followed
by the Cory cats, with the rams added last (after I know I can maintain
the water at the appropriate conditions). <Sounds fine.> Thanks
in advance for the help. Rick <Cheers, Neale.>
Blue ram trouble. Parrots...
mis-placed, env., comp. 11/30/07 Well I went to my LFS yesterday
and got 3 female blue ram cichlids. I put them in a tank with a top,
dominating parrot cichlid (I thought they would get along) and two
bottom dominating yo-yo loaches. I woke up this morning and found one
dead. I don't think it was diseased it seemed ok and I noticed that
they are hiding a lot. I will probably take the yo-yo loaches back to
the shop. I also am considering breeding them, what is a good ratio?
<Greetings. Let's be absolutely clear about this: Rams
(Mikrogeophagus ramirezi) are completely incompatible with Parrot
cichlids (by which I assume you mean those deformed hybrid Central
American cichlids rather than Hoplarchus psittacus). You cannot keep
them together. For a start, Blood Parrot cichlids need neutral to
slightly basic water with a moderate to high level of hardness, say pH
7.5 and around 10-20 degrees dH. Rams need very soft and very acidic
water to live any length of time, around pH 5.5-6.5, hardness 5-10
degrees dH. They also have completely incompatible thermal
requirements: Blood Parrots want the normal 25 degrees C, whereas 28-30
degrees C is mandatory for Rams. Keep Blood Parrots too warm and they
die from heat exhaustion, keep the Rams too cold and they die from
secondary infections. Finally they have utterly different levels of
aggression. Rams are shy, need dither fish, and are too small to pose
any threat to a Parrot Cichlid; Parrot Cichlids are potentially very
large, very boisterous and outgoing, and sometimes hyper-aggressive and
easily able to kill fish as small as Rams should they want to. No-one
who knows anything about these two fish would even dream of putting
them in the same aquarium, so I am curious why you thought this would
work. It simply won't. If you wish to breed Rams, then get their
own aquarium around 60-90 litres in size. Fill with very soft, very
acidic water. Install a suitable filter, bearing in mind that below pH
6 biological filtration won't work so you will need to use Zeolite
instead. Depending on the level of carbonate hardness in the water you
may also need to plan around using some sort of chemical buffer in the
water to prevent pH crashes (soft water is prone to rapid
acidification). Rams may spawn in hard water but the eggs won't
hatch, so you do have to get this aspect right. Rams will form pairs
quite rapidly under aquarium conditions. They do not form harems (as
Apistogramma do) so you only need one male to one female. Of course,
not every male and female will form a pair, so you may want to keep
half a dozen in a larger tank and let them sort themselves out. Once a
pair forms, remove that pair to the breeding tank. Spawning takes place
on flat surfaces, often pebbles. The male often guards the eggs himself
and may drive away the female, in which case you should remove her to
another aquarium before she gets hurt. Eggs hatch after about 5 days,
and will take suitable tiny foods almost at once. Brine shrimp nauplii
are recommended as the first food though liquid fry food seems to work
quite well. Cheers, Neale.>
German Blue Ram Compatibility --
10/9/07 Hi Crew! I have a quick question: I have a 30 gallon
planted FW tank, the current inhabitants are 6 female Bettas, 7
turquoise rainbowfish (they may be moving out soon though) 3 Otos and
about a dozen Amano Shrimp. I have a good mix in the middle and upper
portions of the water column, but the bottom is quite devoid of
activity, my LFS has just received a shipment of some really nice
looking German Blue Rams, and I would like to add one to finish off my
tank if it will be compatible. I have three caves constructed out of
lava rock and slate that go largely unused (except by the shrimp) so my
question is this: would a German Blue Ram fit in well with my mix or
should I look for something else to fill the bottom of the tank?
Thanks, Bryan <A German Blue Ram, by which I assume you mean
Microgeophagus ramirezi, should fit into this mix of animals nicely.
Generally, small cichlids ignore shrimps, but very small shrimps might
be eaten. Spend some time looking for good quality Microgeophagus
ramirezi though -- the stuff on sale is extremely variable. Check the
development of the fins and thickness of the body especially.
Alternatives might include Microgeophagus altispinosa (Bolivian Ram) a
less colourful but generally much hardier and long lived species;
Crenicara species (Checkerboard cichlids); the superb but often
overlooked Nannacara anomala (Goldeneye cichlid); and perhaps even
Nanochromis transvestitus, a very neat West African dwarf with
striking colours and an unusual shape. Small Pelvicachromis such as
Pelvicachromis taeniatus are also an option, and very adaptable in
terms of water chemistry, something the other dwarf cichlids often
aren't. Cheers, Neale>
Re: German Blue Ram Compatibility
10/17/07 Hi Neale, thanks for replying so fast! <T'was
nothing.> So I went to the LFS to take another look at the Rams, and
they told me they had to quarantine them due to an ich outbreak. One of
the reasons I like that store so much is that they will not sell fish
that they even think might be sick. Anyway, they had just received
their weekly shipment that day and had a new batch of what they called
Butterfly Rams, they looked quite a bit like the others, only a taller
more rounded vertically and skinnier body, but with very similar
colorations / markings. <They're the same species, just
different varieties. German Blues have more blue colouration. Butterfly
Rams are more similar to the wild type. The Latin name for the species
used to be Papillochromis, which basically means "Butterfly
Cichlid", hence the name.> But being that I didn't know
anything about them, they had just come in and I don't like to buy
new arrivals I left Ramless. Are these much different in temperament/
requirements than the Blue Rams? <Identical.> Also on an
unrelated/sort of related note: I have had a smallish population of
Ramshorn and what I believe are cornucopia snails in both of my planted
tanks for a while. In the last month both populations have been growing
rapidly (the Ramshorns more so) and my broadleaf swords are getting
chewed. <Colombian Ramshorn snails by any chance? Marisa
cornuarietis. A notorious plant-eater. Regardless, some snail species
can be a problem.> I have been removing some by hand when I do water
changes, but I can still see quite a few in areas of the tank I
can't reach without disturbing the plants. I have read the article
on WWM about snail control, and I think that adding a predator would be
the best bet, I don't like using chemicals, and my general
experience in the hobby has been that nature's way is often the
best way, plus I don't want to completely eliminate them, the
cornucopias do a wonderful job keeping the soil aerated, I just want
something to keep them in check and from overwhelming the system. <A
fair enough attitude. The snails I prefer, Melanoides spp., don't
ever eat plants, so they're safe, but other species may do. In any
event, adding a snail-eater works surprisingly well.> The problem
with the species recommended in the article is that they all seem to
get too big for either of my systems. <Indeed, this is a common
issue. One of my local aquarium shops has begun selling a
"snail-eating snail" that gets round this issue.> From
what I've read Haplochromis placodon, Chilotilapia rhondesii,
Lamprologus tetracanthus, and Botia hymenophysa all grow over 6 inches,
which is way too big for either of my systems, I am looking for
something in the 2-3 inch area, that I can keep in a group of 1 to 3(at
the most) that wont terrorise my other fish or harm my plants, I have
only come across one species that may meet that description; Botia
sidthmunki, but I don't know how they will do in my systems...
<The smaller 'Botia' are certainly an option, but they do
tend to be fairly aggressive, and will fight with dwarf cichlids over
hiding places. I have pufferfish in several tanks, and they do an
amazing job of cropping snail populations. But not all puffers work
well in communities. Much better perhaps to use a trap (there's a
commercial one called LimCollect, or you can make your own).>
Here's what I've got, please let me know if you can think of
anything that could fit in: 29 gallon Penguin 330 Bio-wheel 2 X 65
Power compacts 8800K range 6 Female Bettas 7 Turquoise Rainbowfish
(maybe moving to the LFS, I don't think I can support these guys in
this tank when they are full grown) If I move out the rainbows I am
thinking of adding harlequin Rasboras (thoughts on their compatibility
with this system?) I would like to shift this tank to more of a
biotopic set up ( or at least from the same continent...)
<Harlequins definitely a better choice for a relatively small
aquarium, but they do need soft/acid water to do their best.> 3 Otos
12 Amano shrimp <Which won't last 5 minutes if you add any loach
big enough to tackle snails.> The water in this tank is generally
hard and alkaline, I use tap water treated with SeaChem prime and aged
with an airstone. Neither tank has C02, but I am planning on adding it
soon'¦ There hasn't been any sign of chewing in this tank,
though the population increase wasn't as fast here, and there are
no broadleaf swords... Ideally I'd like something that would fill
the bottom dweller niche here, midwater and surface are well populated,
but the bottom is barren save for the shrimp <Hmm... A school of the
more unusual and striking Corydoras would be the obvious choice. Badis
would be good too, if you're happy to feed them live/frozen foods
each day. Numerous dwarf cichlids could work. Nannacara anomala and
Laetacara curviceps are both very beautiful and peaceful fish;
under-appreciated somewhat because they lack bright colours when seen
in aquarium shops. But in a planted tank with lots of shade and a dark
substrate, they're lovely!> The other tank is a 36 gallon corner
bow front Fluval 405 filter 2 X 65 watt power compacts, 1 6500k, 1
actinic 3 swordtails (spotted a newborn fry yesterday) also have five 6
week old fry in a grow out tank that will be moving in soon. 23
Glowlight tetras 9 bronze Corys 3 Otos will most likely be adding 5
marble hatchets in the near future I use the same water source as the
other tank, but I have peat in the filter, so this tank is quite a bit
softer. I was hoping that my snail eater in this tank would be a mid
water fish, the cories have the bottom covered, the tetras hang out in
the middle/bottom, and the swords rarely come out in the open. And if
at all possible I would like a fish that originates in the Amazon or at
least south/central America. <No such beast, I'm afraid, with
the possible exception of Colomesus asellus, the South American puffer.
While I've had great success keeping them in communities, not
everyone has such good results, and they certainly will nip slow-moving
fish like livebearers, angels, and Corydoras. There are snail-eating
cichlids of course (like Oscars) but hardly practical here! There are
also snail-eating catfish, especially the Doradidae; Platydoras
costatus is one popular example, but it's a fairly big fish (~15
cm) and not an ideal addition to the planted aquarium because of it. It
will also eat very small fish, given the chance.> this is the tank
that is getting heavily chewed, there was a bid spike in Ramshorns last
week (well before that, but they were small-medium sized before I
really saw how many there were) I observed them making a mass migration
up the glass towards the top of the tank, I decided that this was bad,
and possibly a sign of the tank fouling / about to foul. So I took a
glass cleaner and a net and "harvested" about a golf ball
sized mass of snails, probably several dozen, mostly juveniles. Anyway
I changed 1/3 of the water and tested the levels the next day and
everything was normal. <The art is using a trapping method on a
regular basis. Eventually you'll get the population low enough that
you can manually remove enough snails on sight that they won't ever
become a problem.> I normally do 10 gallon water changes weekly on
both tanks, but I think that the boom in snails was caused by too much
nutrients in the system, so I've cut back on the feedings and added
a mid week 5 gallon water change for both tanks. <Hmm... snails are
more about rotting organic matter, like dead plant leaves and uneaten
food, than the nutrient content of the water. Of course, eutrophic
water conditions promotes the growth of algae, and that in turn feeds
the snails.> I would really appreciate any recommendations that you
have for either of my tanks... picking snails off of leaves is a
tedious task to say the least! <Agreed! Puffers *do* work, and so
potentially will loaches and the cats and cichlids. But whether the
benefit returned by keeping them justifies any problems they create is
up to you.> P.S. what is your opinion of Ramshorns in fry tanks? I
have some in my fry tank and they do a great job of keeping things
clean (it's a 10 gallon, no filter) but I have heard that they will
try to eat small/sleeping fry, and I did have 1 disappear, though it
was smaller and much paler than the rest, it may have kicked off for
other reasons and just got scavenged'¦ <Snails are harmless
in tanks with mobile fry, such as livebearers. What they're a
threat to are fish eggs and "wrigglers" -- egg-layer fry that
aren't mobile yet. Snails will of course eat dead/dying fry, but
that's not really a problem.> Thanks again for all the help!
~Bryan <Hope that helps, Neale>
Re: German Blue Ram Compatibility
10/17/07 Hi Neale, <Bryan,> Any chance you know of a retailer
stateside for the LimCollect? All of the retailers I can find are in
the U.K., I did see some pictures of it, I think I could make one...
<Hmm... it may be marketed under another name. I know they *are*
sold in other places than the UK. For a start, I bought mine in
Germany! Yes, you can make your own. Look up "lobster pot"
and you're after something similar. A trap where the snails can
crawl in but can't crawl out so easily.> So do you think that
both of my tanks will be incompatible with any of the snail eaters out
there? <Basically, snail-eaters tend to be tricky. The safest are
the Doradidae catfish, things like Agamyxis and Platydoras spp. But
they *will* eat very small (neons, livebearer fry) fish and potentially
small shrimps. Other than that, they're harmless animals but very,
very nocturnal. Also, they need to be hungry to eat snails (they'd
sooner eat catfish pellets!).> I don't have any shrimp in the 36
gal, would a dwarf Botia work in there? Or would it harass the tetras?
<Botia are unpredictable in community tanks. They're basically
schooling but intensely hierarchical fish. When kept in very small
groups their boisterousness spills over into chasing other fish (cf.
Tiger barbs). But if kept in large (6+) groups, they tend to be more
reliable. Even so, Botia (actually, a whole bunch of genera now) tend
to be a bit on the pugnacious side, so work best with midwater fish
able to handle themselves, either by being tough (like cichlids) or
fast (like Silver Dollars).> And do you think a puffer might work in
the 30? I've always wanted a puffer, but i just assumed they all
needed at least 1.005. <There are both freshwater and brackish water
puffers in the trade. None really make good community fish, but I'm
currently keeping Colomesus asellus and Carinotetraodon irrubesco in my
180 litre community and both have largely behaved themselves very
well.> The female Bettas are no pushovers, they're a pretty
rowdy group, and I think the rainbows are fast enough to out run about
anything... <Female Bettas will be picked to pieces by even
well-behaved puffers. Puffers are a reasonable gamble with fast-moving
tetras and other fish of that type (such as Bleeding Hearts, Glassfish,
Tiger barbs, etc.). But anything slow and/or with long fins is an
"all you can eat buffet" in the eyes of a pufferfish!>
I've read that Oto's and the shrimp will be fine with dwarf
puffers, but i wonder about the other two groups, if I were to revamp
this tank and pull out the rainbows and Bettas what could I add with a
puffer as far as midwater and surface fish? <Shrimps can be safe
with Dwarf pufferfish (Carinotetraodon travancoricus) but I
wouldn't keep shrimps with anything larger than them. I've just
fed my C. irrubesco a bunch of woodlice (terrestrial isopods) not much
smaller than Amano shrimps, and they were crunched up instantly.
Otocinclus can work with "peaceful" puffers because
they're fast.> Thanks! <Cheers, Neale>
Re: German Blue Ram Compatibility --
10/18/07 Hi Neale, Well I tried to construct a home made trap... i
took an small empty hair gel tub and cut 4 snail sized square holes at
equal distances, i din not cut the top of the hole, and i bent it in so
it would form a sort of flap, i made sure it was bent back enough so
that a snail could get in... i bated it with a few sinking wafers and
left in in the tank overnight. i awoke to find no snails and the food
exactly where i left it, untouched. i thought maybe the holes were too
small to get the biggest snails, but they should have been plenty big
enough for the medium sized ones. I left it in the tank, and we'll
see what has transpired when i get home tonight, but so far the
experiment has been very unsuccessful... <Hello Bryan. One popular
design DIY design uses nothing more complex that a pair of saucers. Put
one the normal way up on the sand. Add bait. Put the other saucer on
top. Put a piece of gravel on the edge of the bottom saucer so that it
lifts up the edge of the top saucer along one side of the trap. What
you should have now is a narrow crack big enough for snails to get
into, but too small for fish. In the morning, push out the stone, push
the saucers together, and lift out the trap. In theory, lots of snails
will be trapped and you can then dispose of them. Repeat each night for
at least a couple of weeks. Another method uses a glass tumbler with a
sheet of cellophane (e.g., Saran Wrap or Cling Film) fixed over the top
with a rubber band. Make a small (5 mm or so) hole at one edge of the
cellophane. Drop some bait into the glass. Place the glass on the
bottom of the tank. Make sure the hole is at the level of the sand, so
the snails can crawl in. In both cases, the idea here is the snails can
get in but can't get out. That's why the hole needs to be level
with the sand. But you also need to use something that won't trap
fish, so measure the size of the hole carefully. While it's
unlikely a small fish would die if it got caught inside either trap,
it's still not worth risking. Hope this helps, Neale>
German blue rams comp.
-- 08/27/07 Hi, I just have a quick question. I have a 29 gallon
aquarium with 3 serpae tetras, 1 Pleco, and 1 African cichlid (at least
I think it's an African, I found him in with the feeder goldfish we
sell at the petstore where I work; he must have somehow got mixed in
with them at the breeders', because we don't sell any that look
like him). Anyway, so my question is, would it be ok to put a few
German Blue Rams in with these fish? I know the Serpaes are a little
aggressive, I had to move them out of my 38 gallon tetra tank because
they were picking on all the other fish. Also, how many would you
recommend for a 29 gallon? I was thinking maybe 4 or 5 of them. By the
way, I love your website, and read it whenever I want to learn more
about a species! Thanks for all your help! Sarah <Hello Sarah.
Absolutely NO! You cannot put German rams (Microgeophagus ramirezi)
into this aquarium for oh so many reasons. To start with, African
cichlids (by which I assume you mean some type of Mbuna, like
Pseudotropheus zebra) will hammer rams to death. Secondly, Serpae
tetras are fin- and scale-parasites in the wild, and in aquaria spend
most of their time nipping at other fish. It's what they do, and
you can't stop them. While this isn't a problem when
they're kept with fast fish like danios, with anything as dozy as a
ram, you're asking for trouble. Nipped fins become infected, and
then you have to deal with Finrot and fungus. Finally, Microgeophagus
ramirezi needs entirely different water conditions to African cichlids.
Microgeophagus ramirezi will only thrive in water that is above average
in temperature (28 C being about right) and soft (below 10 degrees GH)
and acidic (around pH 6). Anything else, and the they are disease-prone
and short-lived. Mbuna cichlids need moderate temperatures (25 C is
fine) and hard (20 degrees GH upwards) and alkaline (pH 8) water.
Anything else, and they are disease-prone and short-lived. See the
problem? In short, a pair of Microgeophagus ramirezi (or maybe a trio,
one boy, two girls) in the 29 gallon tank with a school of upper-level
peaceful characins such as Hatchetfish would be about right. Cardinal
and neon tetras also work well, too. Don't make the common mistake
of keeping them with Corydoras though: not only are the common
Corydoras species intolerant of high temperatures, Microgeophagus
ramirezi are too aggressive when spawning and have been known to bite
the eyes off the poor little catfish! If you must keep a catfish with
Microgeophagus ramirezi (and don't mind the catfish eating their
eggs!) then opt for something like an Ancistrus catfish or even a small
Synodontis like S. nigriventris. I hope this helps. Cheers,
Neale.>
Gold Rams, comp., beh. 4/8/07 Hi
People, <Ruth> Firstly I would just like to thank you for your
great site. I've got a 60l tank (about 2 months old) with 3
Peppered Corys, 2 Schwartz Corys, 4 Longfin Leopard Danios and a pair
of Gold Rams. The tank is well planted with live plants, plenty of
bogwood and a rock cave. <Sounds very nice> Everything was great
until about a week ago when the female ram started bullying the Corys
at feeding times only. <Mmm, unusual... unless... they're
reproducing...> The Rams aren't timid in any way and she only
chases them if they run away, typical bully! I thought maybe they were
trying to spawn so added a flat piece of slate at the bottom for them
but nothing happened. Then I added the 4 Danios as ditherfish, <Good
idea> funny thing is she seems to like them and doesn't bother
them at all and even swims around with them. Is she just hungry? Or
territorial because she and the Corys both eat at the bottom?
<Perhaps a bit of both> She only fights over catfish pellets not
frozen or flake food. I always sit and watch them eat and she eats like
a pig and doesn't look pinched. Is my tank too full? <Is near a
"psychological" limit here> Will the Corys manage with a
bit of chasing at meal times (I'm 99% certain it doesn't happen
at any other times) or would it be better to get rid of the rams?
Thanks very much, Ruth <I do think all should be fine here... The
Corydoras/Callichthyids are quite armored... and the Rams know this...
I might try feeding at both ends of this tank simultaneously... Please
do read (on WWM, fishbase.org, elsewhere) re the water quality of
Microgeophagus... perhaps lowering water temperature will reduce the
agonistic behavior. Bob Fenner>
Aggressive Ram Cichlid -- 3/28/07
Hello, I asked a question a while ago about why my ram was so shy. Now,
he is much less shy, being out in the tank more and not being
afraid of me being near the tank. He has been much confident with
swimming around, and he has even looked much more colorful
than he has before, especially the bright blue spots.
However, he is not very nice to my other fish. He looks like an
aggressive monster, something I haven't seen before, but only
with the Corys. He would just chase the Corys around the bottom of
the tank because that is where he would hang. Then I noticed he
started to chase the hatchets, something I never noticed. Two days
ago I added 2 bleeding heart tetra, and right when they entered he
chased them. Now today I looked at all my fish and they seem
normal. The tetras are swimming around, and do not seemed
real stressed. Of course the ram is still chasing everyone around.
Sometimes it will be a nudge or bluff, others it will be a full
fledge chase around the tank. He would even chase my hatchet into the
side of the tank and cause him to jump out of the water. It
was worse when feeding. All of the fish were eating and
every second the ram was chasing a different fish. Now I am
not sure what to do. I thought rams were peaceful, or
peaceful compared to their cichlid siblings. I literally can sit
at the tank for 10 minutes and see him chase each fish at
least once. What should I do? Is there a way to lessen the
aggression? Should I get rid of him? Get him a mate? Advice
appreciated. By the way. Here is tank info. 15 gallons eclipse system.
2 Amazon sword plants. 2 fake driftwood rocks. 1 German
Blue ram. 2 Silver hatchets. 3 nanus orange Corys, 2
bleeding heart tetra. I got nitrates down to 5, before
adding the tetras. Nitrates would increase slowly after
a couple weeks of not changing water. Now I perform at least
a 3 gallon change each week. Thanks, Joe <Your ram is a
dwarf cichlid from South America. All cichlids are territorial to some
degree. What you are seeing is normal ram cichlid behavior. He is
simply pushing all the other fish out of his territory. The bigger his
territory the more food he has for himself and the better chance of
attracting a mate to his area.-Chuck>
Temperature Range - Metynnis
and Rams? - 09/30/2006 Hello y'all, <Hi. My
apologies for the delay in reply; I've been out, and your email
came to us in a format that unfortunately our Webmail system had some
trouble with, and I am one of the only folks able to respond to it.>
First of all, thanks as usual for your maintenance of a wonderfully
informative site. <Thank you very much for these kind words.> (I
recently wrote my comprehensive exams for a PhD in education, and cited
this site as a great example of a constructivist learning environment.
So thanks for your contribution to my degree as well.) <This is high
praise indeed - thank you again.> I would like to keep Metynnis
hypsauchen and Microgeophagus ramirezi together in a 150 gallon system.
<Maybe possible in this size system, given enough plants and hiding
spaces.... but do keep in mind that the rapid schooling and
darting about of the Metynnis may be stressful to the shy
rams. This is something I, personally, wouldn't try, but
I imagine it can be done with success in as large a system as this.>
My plan is to keep the temp at about 80-81° F, as this seems
to be at the upper limit of the silver dollars and the lower limit of
the rams. <The rams can go lower if you don't intend to
breed. Warmer would be preferable for them, but I'm
rather concerned about the warm water making the Metynnis even MORE
quick and spazzy.> However, I'm concerned that much of the
literature about rams stresses that they're delicate, and happier
at temps around 85. <Indeed. But I would not bring the
Metynnis to this temperature.> Should I: a) go with the
"intersection" temp of 80-81 b) keep the temp higher, on the
theory that the silver dollars are more tolerant of out-of-range temps
than the rams c) not keep the two species together?
<.... I would choose "C". But again,
that's just me.> Thanks again for your help and patience.
<And you, again, for your kind words and consideration!> Melinda
Johansson <All the best to you, -Sabrina>
Cory's With Rams 4/27/06 Good Morning~ I've been
at my aquarium hobby for about 6 months...learning a lot from this
great site/people and really appreciate it! I've spotted a dwarf
ram that I'm interested in and have a couple questions. The LFS has
their temperature with these fish at 84 degrees...I've gotten my
12gal tank up to that temp....my tank was down for a
while...bio-wheel.. have added dirty filter water & dirty
gravel...about a week ago...will it be okay to put about 3 or 4 rams
here?....should I purchase a few danios/barbs at the same time to put
in with them - or just the rams by themselves? < Either way would be
fine.> (I'm planning to have a 20gal free in a couple weeks and
intend to move them to that) Also, I really like Corys and wonder if
any particular one is okay with the higher temperature? < Most
Cory's can handle the elevated water temps. Some cannot but these
are usually rare and expensive. Check out the Cory's at
Planetcatfish.com if you are interested in a particular
species.-Chuck> Thanks Again, Judy
Re: Rams With Other
Fish 5/21/06 Chuck, thanks for the reply. Talking
about a forty gallon breeder, can Corys be kept with
Rams? I've read Rams will pick out Corys' eyes when
breeding if kept in too small a tank. Also for a forty
gallon what is a good stocking level for Rams, cardinals and Corys (if
they can be kept safely with Rams). Thanks a bunch! M < Rams, like
many cichlids occupy the lower areas of the tank. Cory's compete
with them for food. They will chase the Cory's away and may try to
attack an eye. In a 40 gallon the catfish will learn to stay away from
the rams. Go with 20 cardinals, 6 rams and 6
Cory's.-Chuck>
Kribensis, Ram query... Corydoras
comp. 4/21/06 Hi Crew, <Jeff> I hope all is well
wherever you all are. Winter finally broke last week here in Edmonton,
Canada. <Thank goodness... my cold tolerance (and no preference) is
"out the window" with advancing age> Anyway, I have a reef
invert question and a freshwater question. <Okay> Reef
- I recently added a frogspawn with three heads and a small
xenia about 4 days ago. Both appear to be doing very well, the xenia is
showing full movement (pulsing) and the frogspawn is still colourful
and opens up very nicely during lighting hours. My system is a 29 gal
with 130w of PC (10k & Actinic). Firstly, how often do I feed each
species (Reefroids for xenia & Mysis for other). <3-4 times a
week> Secondly, I have the frogspawn in the middle of the setup
about 10 inches below the lights and set on my LR. Is it better to have
it as low as I can and in the substrate? <Mmm, I would keep this
Euphylliid off the bottom. See WWM re> I am letting the xenia tell
me where it wants to be. <Good... just do keep it confined>
Freshwater - I recently upgraded a 7 gal bowfront to a 25 gal tank. I
had 4 Cory cats (5-6 years old each) and are very fond of them. I just
added a male and female Krib to the tank 5 days ago. I had not recently
read up on the fish, just remembered that I thought they would be
interesting and hardy. They are particularly beautiful specimens, but I
am embarrassed to say that I didn't realize that they were bottom
dwellers and would take nips out of my Corys. <Too likely, yes>
My question is can I replace them with rams (tank bred) and have the
Corys left alone? <Yes... a much better choice> If it is ok, I
saw some very small and very red shrimp that would be neat to have,
they are about 1/3 the size of my algae eating shrimp I have (2 only),
would the rams bother the new small red shrimp. <Not likely> The
shrimp remind me of camel backed shrimp for marine. Thank you again for
your time, Jeff Morgan <Morgan: "Man of the sea"... Bob
Fenner>
Blue/Gold Rams Dear Mr. Fenner,
<Adam> My name is Adam and I had some
questions about rams. First off I have a 125 gal. tank @ 78
F with a few large iridescent sharks, African butterfly fish, hi-fin
bullsharks, Redtail and rainbow sharks, silver dollars, black ghost
knife, and a few common Plecos. I just today did a water
test to find that I have a ph of 8.4, very hard water and 200+ ppm of
nitrate. <Yikes... the hardness not a concern for your minnow shark
species... but the Dollars, Plecos and Rams prefer much softer. I'd
be checking your nitrate test kit... 200 ppm is about ten times past
toxic.> I just need to know what the best way is/are to fix all the
problems I have with the water spec.s as applied to the preferences of
blue and gold rams. <Better to keep them in a tank without the more
"outgoing" species above... and to start with cleaner source
water... likely from a reverse osmosis device, though you could use an
in-line treatment tool... and then to treat this water either with
peat, a chemical prep., or with a system with live plants... before
using> What kind of live plants are good for rams and
their ideal water conditions? <Others found in the same habitat,
that enjoy soft, acidic, warm water... the specifics of the more
readily available aquarium plants are listed on www.WetWebMedia.com>
Will Amazon sword work? <Yes> How do peat granules in
the filter work and are there any side effects to the water? <The
humic acids, other organics that are the peat counteract, neutralize
carbonates... do effect the water... making it softer, more acidic,
often yellow to light-brown in color> If I use a co2 fertilization
system will that also effect my water quality, and is this a good idea?
<Will, and yes... will lower pH, hardness, boost plant growth>
Is there a difference in hardiness between blue and gold
rams? <Sometimes yes... either can be hardier or not...
depending on source (the "German" Blue Rams are very tough
for instance, but the ones out of the orient often die easily)> And
lastly, can the fish I listed above handle all the water conditions
needed to keep healthy rams? If not, just say so, I would
love to have rams in my tank but if I can't so be it. <Better to
NOT mix all the fishes you list above together... at least two
different tanks would be best... with one being for more outgoing, hard
and alkaline, cooler water... the other for easier going, soft, acidic,
warmer water. Bob Fenner> Thank you so much for your time, Adam
Staude
What Goes With Rams? Hey. I'm getting a tank of about
20-30 gallons size. and I definitely want to keep at least 2 ram
cichlids and about 4 Corydoras catfish. Any other suggestions of fish?
Maybe other cichlids, or a shoal of tetras? < Any school of tetras,
Rasboras or danios would be fine as long as they don't get any
bigger than two inches. Other dwarf cichlids like Nannacara anomala,
Laetacara Curviceps or Apistogramma species would also work well.>
For the rams and catfish what sort of live plants can you suggest? <
Stay away from most stem plants unless you plan on adding CO2. Amazon
swords and many Cryptocoryne species would work well.> I also want
to put rocks in my new tank. If I buy them out of water from a shop, do
I need to soak them in water and for how long? < Rocks that are
suitable for the aquarium need to be rinsed well to remove any dust
particles that may have accumulated on them. Then they can be placed in
the aquarium right away.-Chuck> Thank you. James
Re: Edit: Ram question Edit: I also forgot to ask if I would
need to get more than one; I wanted a ram as an ornamental fish but had
no intentions on breeding. Do they prefer more of their
kind? Which sex would you recommend for a non-breeding tank?
<Is better to have more than one... is a social species... A male
and female are best, but two or more males or females can/will do. Bob
Fenner>
Stocking a 10g Freshwater Tank - 07/12/2005 Hello,
<Hi!> I have a ten gallon tank with one Ram,
five guppies and one Cory. Whenever I look at the tank it
seems really empty, and I was wondering if I could get one
or two more Rams or maybe a Krib... <I would not. In such
a tiny space, should you end up with two male rams (ore even a male ram
and a male Krib), they will likely harm each other for territory, and
should you end up with a male and a female ram, and they choose to
breed, they can and likely will make very short work of your other
fish. I would really advise against making this
addition.> On a forum I heard about a person having four
Rams in one tank, of course that would be too many, but two
or three.... <Do keep in mind that these ARE cichlids, however
timid, and DO have cichlid tendencies when breeding or staking out
territories.... A m/f pair in a 10g tank with no other fish
would likely breed and could do quite well, but any other fish - other
rams included - could be damaged or killed. A ten gallon
tank just doesn't offer the space they'd need to establish
multiple territories. It might work out for a few months,
but ultimately, harm will probably come of it.> Thanks for your
time! <You bet. Sorry to put a damper on it - BUT -
another consideration for yah.... Corys are very serious
schoolers, and tend to be much more active and "cheerful"
when in groups of at least three.... I would recommend
adding a couple of the same species of Cory to perk up your pal and
make your tank more active and "full" seeming. I
will caution you, however, that this may be somewhat taxing on the
stocking of your tank; test very often for ammonia, nitrite, and
nitrate for the first few weeks after adding the Corys (if you choose
to add them). Keep ammonia and nitrite at zero, and nitrate
less than 20ppm.> Christine <Wishing you and your fishes
well, -Sabrina>
More about Christine's Ten Gallon and Ram/s 7/12/05 Hey
Crew! <Christine> My name is Christine, and I have recently
bought one Ram and a couple of fancy guppies. <Mmm, the Ram may chew
on the guppies tails...> I've put them in a 10 gal. and then
found out more about Rams on your site. From what I could
gain, Rams would prefer more company with their own kind...
Should I get another Ram? I also have a Cory in the 10 gal.
Also, the average pH in the tank is 7.0, is this ok for the Ram?
<Should be fine> And would a temperature of 78 degrees
work, or is it too low? <Would be better a bit higher, but the
guppies prefer the water to be where it is... or cooler> Your web
site is great! Christine <I would go ahead with the addition of the
new Ram, and make a plan for moving the guppies. Bob Fenner>
Revisiting the Ram - 07/12/2005 Hello! <Hi,
again! Sabrina here....> I have a 10 gallon tank with 5
guppies, 1 Cory and one ram. I have had this ram for only one day, and
it's not eating. <One day.... If by this you mean you
got it earlier today, I would not be concerned about it not
eating. If you got it yesterday, it might be a different
story. Be sure to offer a variety of tasty foods, and keep
in mind if the ram is large enough, or the guppies small enough, if you
don't get food in him soon, he may be looking at those guppies and
licking his lips pretty soon. Rams are timid, but cichlids
nonetheless.> I think it is still a little bit in shock, but I just
want to be sure. Also, I want the Ram to have the best colors and I
would like to know what would be the best food to give it... I have
flakes and dried bloodworms, but what else? <I would try
high-quality frozen foods, or failing all else, I would try live
foods.... never Tubificid worms (Tubifex, blackworms), but
live bloodworms, mosquito larvae, or brine shrimp are an option, if he
refuses to eat over the next few days. Once you get
*something* in him, it'll be easier to get him to eat other
foods. Also, as timid and shy as rams are, be certain that
there is plenty of cover and lots of good hiding spots for him, so
he'll feel safer in coming out to eat. If he's
scared, he may just refuse to eat and may even starve.> Thanks a
ton! Christine <You bet. Good luck with your
fishes, -Sabrina>