In Venezuela

In Colombia

In Mexico
(to be added)
In its newest South African incarnation
Step 1) Rocks and driftwood
Step 2) Gravel
Step 3) Add plants
Step 4) Finished!
-Shane
It is the only "display" tank I plan to set up. Since it is in the living room, the wife gets a say in how it looks and she wants a school of nice Congo tetras. You can not tell from the pics, but there are two 295 gph powerheads each attached to a 40 gallon sponge filter behind the driftwood. With 590 gph total turnover, there is some serious current in the tank. I have four Lamprologus sp. "Congo" that came in through a local exporter. I need to get them identified as they match nothing in any of my resources. Any central African cichlid experts out there? The tank will be finished off with a few lowveld Chiloglanis that can withstand the higher temps. The goal is for an attractive, lightly stocked, easy to take care of display.all excellent set ups shane, what you putting in the new one?
Yes, they were collected in Delta Amacuro, Venezuela (Orinoco) by Whitepine and I.Did I detect Copella species in setup #1
I doubt it. Those that have known me longest know that I am actually still an Asian catfish guy at heart. I just keep moving everywhere but Asia!I hope you wont lose your interest for South American catfishes now that you are in Africa
I asked a friend Dave (http://www.davesfish.com/) and he replied..........Shane wrote:This is the "Lamp" sp exported from the Congo. Anyone have a clue? Thanks.
-Shane[/img]
That is one awesome fish!!! I don't recognize it for sure, but it
looks like it could be Lamprologus tigripictilis, which is a fish I
would love to get my hands on! Tell him he may want to check with
Melanie Stiassney. She described the fish.
Well Amanda, that stand is about 13 years old and has seen service on three continents now. It has had heavy tanks on it and been mis-handled by moving companies in 5 countries. I am pretty sure my daughter will someday have to figure out a way to get rid of it when I am gone.How has this metal stand worked for you over the years? I don't see any bowing at all!
This is L. werneri. L. tigripictilis has a greater number of bars.Shane wrote:This is the "Lamp" sp exported from the Congo. Anyone have a clue? Thanks.
http://www.dignall.com/gallery/d/54519-1/DSC01871.JPG
-Shane