Hi all,
This is my intro, the story of how I came here to this board. I live in Toronto.
I've had fish tanks for almost 50 years. I was given my first 5 gal tank when I was about 6 years old. I've always had at least one tank since then.
Now I have four tanks running. One is a 40 gal marine tank with one big fat green spotted puffer. I also have a 15 gal Fluval Flex tank with four dwarf puffers, and a little 3 gallon tank with a betta. Finally there's the 40 gal freshwater community tank with an assortment of fish.
Months ago my community tank became inundated with black algae. Snails didn't make a dent in it, neither did phosphate removal pads in the filters (I had 2 40 gal HOBs on that tank back then, now I have canisters on both of my 40 gal tanks). I was never a fan of any kind of "sucker" fish because when I was a child the ones we had (otos and common plecos) always ended up eating holes in the other fish. I got a Siamese algae eater and it did a great job, at first. Then once it got to a certain size it started ripping the fins off of the other fish despite being fed with algae wafers, shrimp pellets and veggies and I had to get rid of it. I decided to research plecos because now there are many more species available than there were when I was a kid.
That's how I found this site. I spent a long time looking for pleco species that would clean up the algae but stay small and get along with my other fish. I decided to get an Ancistrus. I went to my LFS and they had small 1" albinos on sale. I bought one, but sadly it only lasted just over a week. I read that they can be delicate as fry so I went back and bought a bigger one, 2.5 inches. With this one I did a slow drip intro to my tank's water before adding it to my tank. I enjoyed watching it when it came out at night. Then after a couple of weeks, it disappeared. I moved some of the decor around but it was nowhere to be found. Sadly I concluded it must have died too. And yes I did check my water parameters many times, the tank is well cycled with 0 ammonia, mid range pH etc.
I decided to try a different species, so I created a list of candidates and went to another shop which specialized in plecos, along with a few other fish species (cichlids, arowanas etc.) I found a tank with several pleco species, the L200 caught my eye. At that time I didn't realize that there were two species called L200. But - there was one which was more active and had a higher fin than the others which I picked out. It's about 5 inches long. It wasn't until I got home that I looked it up on this site again and found that I had chosen the less common "Bary" species.
He (not sure of the gender, could be a she) is quite active, comes out of hiding in the early evening and moves from place to place nibbling different surfaces. Then yesterday I set up the canister for the community tank for the first time. It made an incredible difference to the fish, who all became a lot more active. Most of the species I have appreciate water current. Then this morning I got up and checked the tank and found my "dead" Ancistrus perched on top of a dragon ornament. I think he must have been hiding deep inside the hollow ornament. So it's nice to have a "bonus pleco". It's too young to have facial bristles yet so I don't know the sex.
By the way, I forgot to mention I'm also a fan of Corydoras catfish. I've kept several kinds over the years. Right now I have two "odd" albino Corys in my community tank. They're obviously different species because one is a lot smaller than the other. They're several years old, used to be part of a shoal. I plan to get more once a few of my older fish pass away.
Hello: A Tale of Two Plecos
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Re: Hello: A Tale of Two Plecos
Hi Creepella,
Welcome to PlanetCatfish! And thanks for sharing your journey.
Your story of the missing BN is a common one. If you had a pair in the tank, your story probably would have ended differently with "I thought they both were dead, but then I found 100 babies in the tank.
To lose a BN and buy a Baryancistrus as a replacement, you certainly did level-jump a bit with that, coming from just an Ancistrus background (and in your mind it was an unsuccessful background until now). Good luck with your L200.
Cheers, Eric
Welcome to PlanetCatfish! And thanks for sharing your journey.
Your story of the missing BN is a common one. If you had a pair in the tank, your story probably would have ended differently with "I thought they both were dead, but then I found 100 babies in the tank.
To lose a BN and buy a Baryancistrus as a replacement, you certainly did level-jump a bit with that, coming from just an Ancistrus background (and in your mind it was an unsuccessful background until now). Good luck with your L200.
Cheers, Eric
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