Test your water parameters and see what fish suit those conditions. That would be a good place to start narrowing down a list.
This may be why I might just go with single specimens of each species I choose to get. I'm not in the right spot to be breeding large cichlids right now. I'll look into the species of catfish you recommended.Instead of the pictus, since it can be swallowed by a full grown oscar, get either a pimelodus ornatus or a pimelodus albofasciatus. The wetspottropicalfish has these right now.
EBJD are fragile and rather slow growing so you will have to pay for a 4"+ EBJD. These cost a lot of money at that size since it's difficult to get them larger. A better alternative and less fragile is a green terror. However, if you end up with a breeding pair of oscars (originating from 6-8 2" juveniles), any cichlid can be terrorized in that 8 foot long tank.
This may be why I might just go with single specimens of each species I choose to get. I'm not in the right spot to be breeding large cichlids right now. I'll look into the species of catfish you recommended.
I've heard that about EBJD. I had a GT in the past, but it really struggled to stand up for itself in the set up I had. Not sure if that's the personality across the board, or I just had a very docile GT.
I'm really hoping to focus on the cichlids, they're more my jam. I want something for the bottom of the tank just so it's fun to watch.Agree that you should go with a larger cat if you want oscars. A group of ornates would be great. Heres my 9" ornatus next to a 6" pictus to illustrate the size difference.
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Check out lima shovelnose and vulture cats if you want just one or a couple even larger cats that will grow at a similar rate to the oscars.
I'm really hoping to focus on the cichlids, they're more my jam. I want something for the bottom of the tank just so it's fun to watch.
I'll look into some of the other cats.
A single Geophagus willemeri/abalios