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L133 question
Posted: 02 Jul 2005, 07:27
by MDoub
I looked at the cat-elog entry for this fish, and it said that it is tolerant of varied water parameters. Can anyone be more specific? I'm thinking that I'd like to have one of these in my Tanganyikan community tank, and possibly in a frontosa tank as well (both tanks- ph 8.2, gh 13, kh 11). It appears that they have similar diets, largely carnivorous, but I wouldn't want to put one of these in a tank with incompatible water. Also, will they grow large enough to keep from being food for frontosas?
Thank you!!
Posted: 03 Jul 2005, 15:55
by MDoub
bump?
Posted: 03 Jul 2005, 20:19
by Janne
Maybe there are very few with experience of this species and thats why you not get any answers, I have seen lots of loricariidae's but never L133 so I cant help you either.
Janne
Posted: 03 Jul 2005, 21:35
by j4782
try a forum search for L333. that may get you more of the info you need.
Posted: 04 Jul 2005, 04:04
by MDoub
I did a search for L133 - it didn't turn much up, is it the same as L333? I'll try that too and see if they're similar. Thanks for the replys, but I hope someone has some experience with these guys...
Posted: 04 Jul 2005, 10:48
by MatsP
L133
is not very similar to L333
, so that won't get you much.
However, L14,
is a much more popular fish withiin the same genera, so it should be possible to find some reasonable information on that (I searched for breeding info on L14 and found a few dozen posts, and there's at least one post on L14 in Shane's world, but I don't remember if it's talking anything about water parameters).
There's obviously nothing saying that L133 wants the same water parameters as L14, because water parameters have much more to do with the environment the fish comes from.
Generally speaking, Loricaridae are fairly tolerant to varying water parameters, as long as the change from natural soft waters to hard tank waters isn't done too suddenly. That doesn't mean, of course, that all loricaridae follows this principle, and for breeding purpose, there's far more species that require soft water to successfully breed.
Hard/alkalic water is certainly not the IDEAL for this fish, as it's natural inhabitat would have very soft and somewhat acidic qualities. But I think it would live quite well in the proposed tank.
--
Mats
Posted: 04 Jul 2005, 12:12
by MDoub
MatsP-
Thanks for the help! I'll start there.
Posted: 04 Jul 2005, 18:24
by j4782
ooops, sorry. typo!