So I inherited my family tank. I was involved in the tank a ton growing up but this has been my first time setting it up on my own. It's an 80 gallon tall, with two power heads and a Fluval 600. I got my filter cycling beautifully and my ammonia has stayed below .25ppm through all fish additions, and I have been performing regular water changes to keep my nitrates at a safe level. I have researched ideal water conditions for each species and they are all currently in their ideal range. Right now, I have a 4" common pleco, 5 full grown tiger barbs, 5 3" clown loaches, a blue moorii who's about 2",a kenyi who's just a hair under 2", and a venustus who's right around 2.25". Everyone's doing well and my africans have been doing great with the barbs and loaches.
I know this is a somewhat atypical build using african cichlids with schooling fish, so I was just curious if the risk is more their ability to kill the barbs when they get bigger, or if the low numbers will stress them out? Also, any tips on africans in general other than watching for Malawi bloat? We only really kept New World cichlids growing up and I'm not sure if there are any key differences in care.
Also, I was curious about dino bichirs. They have a beautiful one at my LFS and I was curious if he could live a happy life in a tank with so many active swimmers. Any help is much appreciated!
I know this is a somewhat atypical build using african cichlids with schooling fish, so I was just curious if the risk is more their ability to kill the barbs when they get bigger, or if the low numbers will stress them out? Also, any tips on africans in general other than watching for Malawi bloat? We only really kept New World cichlids growing up and I'm not sure if there are any key differences in care.
Also, I was curious about dino bichirs. They have a beautiful one at my LFS and I was curious if he could live a happy life in a tank with so many active swimmers. Any help is much appreciated!