I'm sorry he passed away You did what you could to try to save him.The cory unfortunately died overnight. I’m still going to do the water changes good idea? There is only three corys so should I put them in my brothers tank?
Wait, do you mean put the new ones in the ten gallon to quarantine them, or to keep the whole school in? A ten gallon is way too small for peppered cories, let alone six of them. The 20 gallon high is a tight fit for them all, but ten would be far too small.Did a water change today. Nitrates have right down. Will do another water change tommorow. Them probably do them every other day for a week. I will have a spare cycled ten gallon in a week or two at the most so I think I will put them in there and buy some more to make a good school. Thanks for all your Help
The three you have should be okay with the pleco really though. Try feeding cucumber or courgette cut lengthwise, like this;I’ll try rehome them then if that is the best option. He’s had the corys for a while now they’ve always seemed super healthy but I guess I will have to test the water to see. I will probaly ask my lfs to take them
If you'd prefer to keep them, can handle feeding them and the pleco together, and your water parameters are stable enough (zero ammonia or nitrites, nitrates kept below 20ppm with frequent water changes) then they'd be happier in a group of six.yes I put the algae wafers on one side and the pellets on the other. I would like to keep them I do really like peppers Corys. The Bristlenose has Stopped going for them now as much only when it’s algae wafers or bloodworms but I spread the bloodworms out now. So just keep the three or add some?
It's great that you're willing to do whatever they need to keep them healthy, you're doing good I recommend the API freshwater master test kit, it's what most people in the hobby find the best, but other liquid test kits could work too, I just haven't tried them personally to be able to recommend them. Any test kit that has liquid in bottles and test tubes is more accurate than the dip strip type of tests though. They're more expensive to buy initially, but along with being more accurate, you also get more tests from them too, so they work out as a better deal in the long run.Okay thx for helping me put the fish first though. If you dont think keeping them is a good idea. I’m buying a good proper test kit and will start testing my water ever week to make sure all will good. I will just make sure everything is doing ok for 3/4 days then I will buy some more if that is what I need to do