For those that missed it I treated myself to 20 otos yesterday. I have wanted to keep these for some time and now have some in each of my 3 tanks. I wanted them for their own sake rather than their cleaning ability . The other 2 tanks have very little visible algae but are both mature tanks. This tank is my newest and I did have an algae problem until a few weeks ago. Once I resolved the cause I was pretty half hearted about cleaning it because
Fast forward 36 hours and I swear they are noticeably plumper. I can't believe how much they have got through. The driftwood in the photo was uniformly green yesterday morning and the anubias leaves had a lot of algae on them. I wish I had taken a "before" pic. The crypts and sword on the left had no algae, which is how I know that I no longer have an algae problem. Of course more input means more output but that's a small price to pay.
No casualties so far and the sids seem to be ignoring them. I understand that they are high risk in the first month as they need to feed constantly and are starved prior to and during shipping. My standard approach to setting light duration is to keep increasing it till I see visible algae within a couple of days and then dialling it back by an hour. I have already put the hour back in the other 2 tanks, I reckon this one can wait a couple of days more before I increase the time.
They are indeed fascinating to watch and constantly busy. If you do decide to get some please do heed the advice that they need to be in a mature tank. Its not just about water quality. They really are enthusiatic feeders. Personally I would not use them as a substitute for fixing algae problems. I did a deal with myself that I would not get them until my algae was under control. But I have saved myself the trouble of cleaning it up
- fish don't mind algae
- I knew I wanted otos and it was only a matter of time before I succumbed
- The tank is in my study - so nobody else sees it.
Fast forward 36 hours and I swear they are noticeably plumper. I can't believe how much they have got through. The driftwood in the photo was uniformly green yesterday morning and the anubias leaves had a lot of algae on them. I wish I had taken a "before" pic. The crypts and sword on the left had no algae, which is how I know that I no longer have an algae problem. Of course more input means more output but that's a small price to pay.
No casualties so far and the sids seem to be ignoring them. I understand that they are high risk in the first month as they need to feed constantly and are starved prior to and during shipping. My standard approach to setting light duration is to keep increasing it till I see visible algae within a couple of days and then dialling it back by an hour. I have already put the hour back in the other 2 tanks, I reckon this one can wait a couple of days more before I increase the time.
They are indeed fascinating to watch and constantly busy. If you do decide to get some please do heed the advice that they need to be in a mature tank. Its not just about water quality. They really are enthusiatic feeders. Personally I would not use them as a substitute for fixing algae problems. I did a deal with myself that I would not get them until my algae was under control. But I have saved myself the trouble of cleaning it up