Please help the newbie...me!
Posted: 16 Sep 2003, 15:22
Hi, I'm new to this forum and to owning an aquarium. I have a question regarding my current tank and its catfish inhabitants.
I currently have a 12 gallon acrylic tank in my work office. Pictures of it are here: http://www.geocities.com/the_big_zoo/1aquarium.html
This small tank was going to hold some nice, small freshwater somethings, but right now it is housing the office Oscar, 2 blue channel cats, a White Tipped Shark Cat (aka Colombian Shark?), and one snail.
Obviously, this is NOT ideal. These fish were meant to be in the office 30 gallon tank, which started leaking and they were transferred to my newly purchased 12 gallon as an emergency holding tank. The 30 gallon has since leaked twice more and is still under repair. And, due to this pain-in-the-butt experience with a large leaking aquarium, the other folk in the office are discouraged with the whole fishy affair and no one is rushing about to get a new tank.
So, my question is... how long can I reasonably expect to be able to maintain these 4 fish in my small 12 gallon tank? I did some research and I understand the potential size they will attain, but am unsure how quickly they will begin to outgrow the tank.
Amazingly, everyone currently seems happy and healthy (the fish I mean, the office folk are still cranky). I made one change to the tank that is not in the picture, and that is that I traded the stump pictured for one that is less open and squatter to the gravel, so it provides hiding space inside and underneath for the catfish -- as they do get harrassed on and off by the Oscar.
In addition, it sounds like even if we put these fish into the 30 gallon eventually, the cats will also outgrow that? How quickly will that happen? What does one do with these fish when they outgrow your capacity to maintain them? In an office environment, we can't go pver a 30 gallon tank and be practical. A couple of the guys I work with have suggested freeing the blue channel cats into an appropriate Florida river -- is that an option? As for the white-tip shark, everybody just looked around at each other and shrugged in a clueless fashion.
Any and all advice and suggestions are welcome! Advice is much needed, actually!!!
Thanks for your time,
Michelle
I currently have a 12 gallon acrylic tank in my work office. Pictures of it are here: http://www.geocities.com/the_big_zoo/1aquarium.html
This small tank was going to hold some nice, small freshwater somethings, but right now it is housing the office Oscar, 2 blue channel cats, a White Tipped Shark Cat (aka Colombian Shark?), and one snail.
Obviously, this is NOT ideal. These fish were meant to be in the office 30 gallon tank, which started leaking and they were transferred to my newly purchased 12 gallon as an emergency holding tank. The 30 gallon has since leaked twice more and is still under repair. And, due to this pain-in-the-butt experience with a large leaking aquarium, the other folk in the office are discouraged with the whole fishy affair and no one is rushing about to get a new tank.
So, my question is... how long can I reasonably expect to be able to maintain these 4 fish in my small 12 gallon tank? I did some research and I understand the potential size they will attain, but am unsure how quickly they will begin to outgrow the tank.
Amazingly, everyone currently seems happy and healthy (the fish I mean, the office folk are still cranky). I made one change to the tank that is not in the picture, and that is that I traded the stump pictured for one that is less open and squatter to the gravel, so it provides hiding space inside and underneath for the catfish -- as they do get harrassed on and off by the Oscar.
In addition, it sounds like even if we put these fish into the 30 gallon eventually, the cats will also outgrow that? How quickly will that happen? What does one do with these fish when they outgrow your capacity to maintain them? In an office environment, we can't go pver a 30 gallon tank and be practical. A couple of the guys I work with have suggested freeing the blue channel cats into an appropriate Florida river -- is that an option? As for the white-tip shark, everybody just looked around at each other and shrugged in a clueless fashion.
Any and all advice and suggestions are welcome! Advice is much needed, actually!!!
Thanks for your time,
Michelle