![tup tup](./images/smilies/tup.gif)
also does anyone know how best to get rid of snail eggs from live plants as i really want more plants but not if it means more snails
cheers joey x
I've always had larger tanks (six feet and larger) and in spaces thus, clowns WILL get nearly a foot long in such spaces if properly cared for, which is why I suggest smaller Botia species as above. Your father's pair have stayed the same length because they have insufficient space to grow in a three-foot tank.racoll wrote:here's a link on clown loaches:
http://www.loaches.com/species_pages/bo ... nthus.html
You will need at least a four foot tank for these fish.
Having said that, my father has a pair in a 36" X 15" X 15", and at about 6" and twelve years old, they seem to have stopped growing.
Cool fish. I like them a lot. they make a really loud clicking noise when feeding.
Jackster,jackster wrote:All loaches will eat snails but some species are actually quite aggressive.
I agree.Like Tiger Barbs, Botia are more aggressive when alone or in a very small group
Actually, I can think of 3 or 4 particular fish sold as 'loaches' that won't ever do a thing to snails: the dojo loach/weather loach/weatherfish, kuhlii loaches (there are several species), java/"black" kuhlii loach, and hillstream loach/Hong Kong butterfly "plecos."All loaches will eat snails
Jackster,jackster wrote:This is what I meant by aggressive species. This Botia beauforti is about 7 inches long and
has lived with many different species of African c*****ds over the last 5 years. Not one fish
has ever challenged it's dominance and he (or she) has ruled my 55 gallon tank since the day
it was introduced. Even a 10 inch C. frontosa knew better than to mess with this one.
Before I had purchased this fish, I had kept a Botia helodes (Tiger loach)
in the same tank and, although I loved it, it was the meanest fish I have ever encountered.
Will putting a group of Tiger botias together minimize aggression?.
Which is why I said Botia species. Those you mention are not Botia species.j4782 wrote:Actually, I can think of 3 or 4 particular fish sold as 'loaches' that won't ever do a thing to snails: the dojo loach/weather loach/weatherfish, kuhlii loaches (there are several species), java/"black" kuhlii loach, and hillstream loach/Hong Kong butterfly "pl*cos."All loaches will eat snails
You bet the angels will 'hurt' the neons; they are ideal prey organisms for angels, and are avid neon eaters when the angels grow to be young adults, ESPECIALLY if you put the angels in before adding neons. Adult angels will hunt neons if there is cover in the tank (plants, bog wood).jojitsui wrote:the angle fish are not going into the same tank as the loach because i have read when they get bigger (they are only tiny now) they can hurt neons, the loach will be goin in to a planted tank with 2 common plecs and 12 neons, unless you think i should keep the neons in the smaller tank and put the angelfish n loaches 2gether . what do you think would be best??? tcheers joey x