![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon/biggrin.gif)
![Question :?:](./images/smilies/icon/question.gif)
Yes, I'd agree with something along those lines. The bigger ones in a group are more likely to be male, and the smaller more likely to be female, so having more of the smaller ones is a good idea. [This applies to Loricariidae, if you are getting Corys for example, then the smaller ones will be males - and you need about twice as many males as females in Corys!, so numbers would be about right there too].alga wrote:If you have a chance at smaller ones, I would go with a few (3) of the big ones and 7 of the smaller ones (adjust according to budget).
At about 4cm the chances of sexing them is about the same as using body shape on six year old children to tell if they are boys or girls - if they have the same type of clothes and hair-cut, it's unlikely you will be able to tell the difference. You'll just have to take your chances. As stated before, buying some smaller ones and some larger ones would help your chances of getting both males and females - that's assuming of course they are all the same age. If they are fish from different groups that are say a few months difference in age, then there's no good way of telling at such an early age.Mats H. O. Hansen wrote:Well, my budget can afford 4 of them, but i'd like to know if its ok with 2+2 (2 males,2 females) or if its better with 1+2 (1 male, 2 females). Is it some other openions about how many i can have in a 85 liter aquarium? As written before, i am going to try make a breeding group.
Really? Say, in a 500 l tank, with lots of aquascaping/caves, there will still be a dominant male? Would they be able to find each other even? The reason that I am asking is that it seems not consistent with the size of the fish. 1000 l would surely be 6 or 8' long and have plenty of places for the males to dominate.MatsP wrote:One male will certainly be the dominant one if there are more than one male in a tank - unless the tank is absolutely massive - say a 1000 liter tank or more [I'm actually not quite sure how large it needs to be, but certainly more than a few hundred liters to allow two males to have their own territory in one tank]. This applies to almost all loricariidae - obviously the size of the territory will vary with the size of the fish.
--
Mats
That probably depends on the number of females present that are in breeding condition. After all, they are fish, not wolves.2wheelsx2 wrote:Wow...that's really usual information. So then the non-dominant male gets no females?
That's a tank with a fair bit more bottom area than Mats Hansen's tank - like 50% more. And I'd say 19 is quite overstocked in that size of tank.bristlenosedude wrote:I have 19 in a 36 x 18 tank. They range from almost 2" to 3". I have had them for about 2 months. Lots of caves and hiding places but I know it will be at least a year before they are close to being big enough. I am spawning L129 and L199 so I hope to have luck with these also.