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holy cow for a 180 that is small!
Do you have the gh (general hardness) of your water? Some of the dwarf cichlids have different requirements for hardness and can be more sensitive. PH doesn't always give the whole picture. If you are on city water then your water authority may have a website you can find this info from.
oh I thought you meant 24 inches long like the viewing area lol, nvm its regular LOL sorry budYou think? I mean 24 inches tall and 6 feet long is pretty large in my opinion
oh I thought you meant 24 inches long like the viewing area lol, nvm its regular LOL sorry bud
Oh lol, thanks for replying though.Personally idk about this, I haven't kept this type of fish at all. Sorry lol
@OP
In general this is possible with many of the dwarf cichlids, if you provide the right water parameters. Most like soft and acidic. Did you think about any special species?
Well my local specialty shop sells about 10 different varients of Apistogramma.
Thanks so much for the advice. I don't think I'll be putting any dwarf cichlids in with my upcoming angelfish purchase.Many of these will probably be wild caught, unless there is a local breeder supplying the store. And that means very sensitive to water parameters. You need to pin down the GH and KH. You also have to keep the temperature in mind.
Generally, with neotropical cichlids (meaning, those from the tropics of Central and South America as opposed to the African) you do not want to mix species. Generally, I said. Here you do have space, but if this were me, with a group of angelfish (I assume you have a shoal or intend a shoal) I would not consider other cichlids. Corydoras for the substrate are good tankmates, and there are some suitable characin species (some but not all of the tetras) for the upper water. Many who have large angelfish tanks only stock them with angelfish and corydoras catfish, and perhaps a loricariid (pleco, whiptail, Farlowella, etc, depending upon species).
Byron.