Corys 10 gallon
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Corys 10 gallon
In this tank I have 4 male guppies java moss and a sword plant was wondering if I could add 5 bronze or peppered cories.
- MatsP
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
Does it have to be bronze or peppered corys?
Both species grow fairly large given good conditions. Peppered = are probably not the greatest choice, as they are technically subtropical, and need a "cool winter" period to be really at their best.
Something like or should be available in most places and will not grow quite so big, thus allowing for a stocking level that needs less maintenance.
There are dozens of others, but it may require a bit more effort to find those.
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Mats
Both species grow fairly large given good conditions. Peppered = are probably not the greatest choice, as they are technically subtropical, and need a "cool winter" period to be really at their best.
Something like or should be available in most places and will not grow quite so big, thus allowing for a stocking level that needs less maintenance.
There are dozens of others, but it may require a bit more effort to find those.
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Mats
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
Cory pygmaeus is a smaller cory that should be easily available and would be suitable for a small group still leaving adequate space for growth. It might be worth considering one of the dwarf species?
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
There is only 4 types of corys i can find around where I live the bronze, peppered, sometimes julis and pandas except the pandas are 7 dollars each pretty ridiculous.
- MatsP
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
At 7 dollars each, you can probably find some on mail order (assuming you want more than 3-4). Although 7 dollars isn't CRAZY expensive - they are about £4-6 here. If you want "nicer" fish, then they tend to cost a little more.
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- corielover
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
I would say that if you want a smaller option, corydoras panda are the way to go. If you see julis at a store, they are probably trilineatus, and the ones I had were very sensitive. They all died of fin rot, but I currently have some bronzes in the same tank, and they are thriving.However, I may have just gotten a bad batch.
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
I know this is a diffrent subject but does anyone know about banjo catfish are they active at all are they good scavengers what size tank do they need is gravel okay for them.
- MatsP
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
To start from the "back": gravel is not what I would recommend. Nor for corys!
By talking about "good scavenger", what are you trying to achieve? If you get food that falls to the bottom uneaten, I'd suggest that you are feeding the fish too much.
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By talking about "good scavenger", what are you trying to achieve? If you get food that falls to the bottom uneaten, I'd suggest that you are feeding the fish too much.
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
No I mean a fish that like exhibits scavenging behaviour and this is for a different tank also I know smooth gravel is fine for Cory cats.
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
You've unfortunately been misinformed. Gravel is not suitable for , even if it is smooth. It harbours bacteria in the voids, and leads to poor health. It also prevents the fish from indulging in their natural behaviour, digging. No serious keeper would consider using gravel.I know smooth gravel is fine for Cory cats.
I would suggest that if you can't replace the gravel with sand, then it is best not to keep , or banjo catfish for that matter.
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
I guess I will just get shrimp or something.
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
Shrimp are great for cleaning up uneaten food. Much better than catfish, as they have a significantly smaller bioload.
If you do want catfish though, changing over to sand in a 10g tank should not expensive or hard at all, and the water quality should improve too.
If you do want catfish though, changing over to sand in a 10g tank should not expensive or hard at all, and the water quality should improve too.
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
I guess now I'm dead set on 12 ghost shrimp is there any bottom feeer type fish that can mix with shrimp and plants that don't require sand.
- racoll
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
I guess now I'm dead set on 12 ghost shrimp
These are generally used as feeder shrimp, rather than as pets. I would go for cherry shrimp instead.
I can't think of any. Gravel usually increases the bacterial load near the bottom of the tank, which is not good for any bottom feeder.is there any bottom feeer type fish that can mix with shrimp and plants that don't require sand.
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
I have had ghost shrimp before live for 2 years I know they are usually feeders but do make cool bottom feeders.
- corielover
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Re: Corys 10 gallon
Amano shrimp are nice. They're small and scavenge a lot, and they are always about doing weird shrimp stuff. They mix really well with my corys and ancistrus.
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