Oscar Tank
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Oscar Tank
so, how big would a tank have to be to hold an oscar comfortably?, and, would one common pleco (big, almost max size, perhaps) be able to fit in that same tank?
not that im planning or anything, i just like the look of oscars!! and wondering how big a tank they need to be able to be kept along side a pleco
not that im planning or anything, i just like the look of oscars!! and wondering how big a tank they need to be able to be kept along side a pleco
- MatsP
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- MatsP
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You could certainly have bogwood, gravel and plastic plants. Real plants are unlikely to survive the Oscar treatment of being eaten and/or dug up.
You can also have rocks and other decorative elements in the tank. Other fish, as long as they are robust enough to withstand "Oscar treatment" is also fine...
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Mats
You can also have rocks and other decorative elements in the tank. Other fish, as long as they are robust enough to withstand "Oscar treatment" is also fine...
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Mats
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- snowball
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That's a young one, it will lose the nice pattern as it grows.
For decorations, you'd want to use large pieces of wood or rock that the oscar(s) can't move. Never have anything in the tank that is delicately balanced such as rocks that could be knocked over into the glass.
But think of how much nicer such a tank would be with a couple of dozen pictus cats instead of oscar! ;)
For decorations, you'd want to use large pieces of wood or rock that the oscar(s) can't move. Never have anything in the tank that is delicately balanced such as rocks that could be knocked over into the glass.
But think of how much nicer such a tank would be with a couple of dozen pictus cats instead of oscar! ;)
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Not necessary. In a big tank, the glass is quite thick, so it will stand the knock of a small piece of rock, but a larger one that "falls over" would be the big risk.Kana3 wrote:Would it be worth siliconing the rocks to the base glass, or is that just totally unnecessary? Or would it piss-off the Oscar?
Cichlids of this kind will DIG "constructively", i.e. they will have a goal of making a 12" diameter pit that is at least three inches deep. If that means removing the gravel that is UNDER a rock, so be it. Thus, don't have any rocks that lays on top of the gravel, because they will shift. If you also have stacked other rocks ON TOP of those ones, then you're even more relying on the foundation rocks to stay put.
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Mats
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the reccomended size for one adult oscar is at least 55gal (as said by http://www.theoscarspot.com), and thats with room for a small bottom feeder. personally i think 55gal is a bit small for them, i prefer 75gal for a small plec and a oscar. dont forget you need at least 10x filtration per hour unless you have canisters which only need 5x per hour. as said oscars love to renevate! five mins after my plastic plants get buried i can bet on frank zipping over to pull them out, quite amusing watching him dig for china also and even more amusing when he catches a glimpse of himself in the glass.
oscars are great fish to own, very owner responsive but can be a hassle to mix with other fish, notably oscars (once they hit maturity all hell can break loose, best buddies can go to worst enimies in minutes), if you introduce them young it could be alright but some O's just cant handle company
HTH
oscars are great fish to own, very owner responsive but can be a hassle to mix with other fish, notably oscars (once they hit maturity all hell can break loose, best buddies can go to worst enimies in minutes), if you introduce them young it could be alright but some O's just cant handle company
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HTH
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