Jardinis grow to about 24". A standard 75 is 48x19x22... A jardini would barely fit in one let alone be able to live happily in it.Be sure to canopy the tank because like bichirs, they can jump!
Jardinis grow to about 24". A standard 75 is 48x19x22... A jardini would barely fit in one let alone be able to live happily in it.Be sure to canopy the tank because like bichirs, they can jump!
Those get to 15" and require a brackish setup.Sorry for the bad advice, maybe archers if you could get your hands on some.
Archers get 15"? also thought there were some fully freshwater archers. I could be wrong though.Those get to 15" and require a brackish setup.
It doesn't take much at all, it simply makes a link to the youtube video.i think a jardini (australian arowana) would look AWESOME in that tank, but it'll probably outgrow it. It'd look like a baby version of this incredible monster fish tank.
sorry admins if I'm taking up data with all my pic/vid posting.
There is one but they need buddiesArchers get 15"? also thought there were some fully freshwater archers. I could be wrong though.
My .02, lots of plants, pair of leaf fish, kribs, maybe smallish pack of a tall bodied tetra.
Gonna be a war zone...1 Bleekeri/Polleni, 4-5 Jewel Cichlids, and a school of celestial pearl danios as dithers in a black painted aquarium with black sand/tiles.
Not geographically accurate but... Galaxy Galore
1 Bleekeri/Polleni, 4-5 Jewel Cichlids, and a school of celestial pearl danios as dithers in a black painted aquarium with black sand/tiles.
Not geographically accurate but... Galaxy Galore
Keyholes.Anyone have suggestions featuring good sized cichlids? Id like to keep 3-4 of one species and then a dither school. I had considered Red Head Tapajos at one point with dithers up top. Kinda got mixed reviews on the outcome of that.