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Adding Fish To An Already Established Tank

powerdyne6

Fish Crazy
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I always come across people in my facebook groups rehoming singles or a couple Yoyo Loaches. I kinda feel sorry for them being alone. I have 10 in my tank and I know these fish are social and like to be in big groups.

I am hesitant in adding these fish as I don’t want to introduce any bacteria/diseases. I don’t have a 2nd/hospital tank to quarantine.

Is there a safe way to add these fish to my setup or should I stay away?

Thanks
 
Well, you can use a large plastic tub as a temporary QT for them for a month or 2. I agree introducing unknown fish can be risky. You have a nice big group now, so I'd be reluctant to add them without some safeguards.

What size is your tank? 10 adult yoyos seems like a lot in my 4ft tanks but maybe you have more tank space?

I know it's hard to say no when you could give them a better home but I'd be very careful. Would you buy those fish from a shop? Sometimes lone fish can have behavioral problems, they don't know how to socialize in a group. What will you do then if there are issues?

Think hard!
 
Rescue fish from strangers are russian roulette. Sometimes you have to be hard hearted.

Why are they alone?

It could be they were bought by someone who didn't do their homework first. But it could also be that someone bought ten, which carried an infection that killed nine and may be dormant and held in check by the survivor (but unencountered by your fish). It isn't uncommon for a fishkeeper to have a healthy tank of wild caught fish, add one healthy farm raised fish (which will have been exposed to numerous crowding related diseases and survived them) and have everything die but the farm fish. It's a first contact scenario.

If you are going to undertake rescues, you have to setup for it. That means a quarantine tank, cycled, at the right temperature, and set up as a safe and healthy environment for new arrivals. I see the logic in the plastic tub idea, but you need a tank. You have to be able to monitor the health of the new arrival for around 6 weeks. It can't be an environment that brings on illness. If the quarantine tank causes the death of the fish, then you've done it wrong.

It's an expense, and space, but if you're going to do it, do it right. Otherwise, I'd advise hardening your heart and taking care of the group you have.

And please - there is no such thing as a rescue from a pet shop. People buy fish from stores they shouldn't support, and then claim it as a virtue. The stores are happy and have no reason to improve, and the buyer gets a fish that is a potential disease bomb in their tanks.

Our hobby is based on living animals being sold as commodities, and we have to navigate that with a priority on providing proper care for the creatures we have now. QT for new arrivals is part of that. Without it, I wouldn't go there.
 
No matter where I've got my fish from, new fish will be quarantined first for at least a couple of days or longer. It doesn't have to be that they were in good or bad water. But if the water parameters are exceeding mine, it could also be harmful to those fish. And yes, we just don't know if new fish may carry bacteria or a sickness.
But also in my case by keeping rare livebearers, I just can't go to a store to buy me new ones. For most of my fish aren't offered through retail. So, I have to be cautious.
 
Yoyo loaches have a pecking order with a dominant female in charge of the group. If you add another mature female, especially one that has been on its own, you could end up with bloodshed in the tank as the original female tries to dominate the newcomer and one or both get seriously injured or killed in the process.

If the new loaches are younger and smaller than yours, they will probably be ok assuming they are free of disease.

All new fish should be quarantined for at least a month before being added to an established aquarium.
 
Sorry for the late reply.

I do agree with everything that has been said.
Reason for the post was I wanted to possibly see if there could be a way to introduce a single fish to what I already have without causing issues.

Thanks
 

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