First time fish and cichlid keeper here... This is a learning curve.
I have two Bolivian rams in a 125L tank, along with some tetras, corys, otos, cherry barbs, and a raphael catfish. One of the rams is definitely a male, and when I got the other a few weeks later, I intended to buy a female but there's a fair chance that the fish shop incorrectly sexed it, and it's also a male. It's smaller and younger than the first ram.
I've been having difficulty feeding the small one, and I'm concerned I'm underfeeding it. First of all, the big one chases it to the back of the tank at feeding time, and it cowers back there, not coming forward to beg with the other fish. Secondly, it ignores sinking pellets when you drop them on top of it. With the corys and the raphael, nothing stays on the bottom of the tank for very long, so it has no opportunity to find pellets later. The only food it goes for when you drop it are frozen larvae. If you target feed it bloodworms, it eats them (and everything else in the tank also goes nuts).
Its behaviour has noticeably changed in the six or so weeks I've had it -- when I first aquired the fish, it would eat sinking pellets without any trouble, and would catch them before the corys did. Now it doesn't. It hasn't grown a lot, and its underside is slightly concave. Often, it sits lethargically at the back of the tank, although as I write this today, it's being a little more active. The big ram is nosey and curious and races in for food at feeding time.
Myself and my partner are discussing options, but we really don't know what's best: setting up a small quarantine-style tank and putting the small ram in there, although running two tanks long-term isn't something we really want to do at this second; rehoming the fish, either with the LFS I bought it from, or anyone who would take it on; or continuing to feed it bloodworms and hope it improves.
What do the experts think?
I have two Bolivian rams in a 125L tank, along with some tetras, corys, otos, cherry barbs, and a raphael catfish. One of the rams is definitely a male, and when I got the other a few weeks later, I intended to buy a female but there's a fair chance that the fish shop incorrectly sexed it, and it's also a male. It's smaller and younger than the first ram.
I've been having difficulty feeding the small one, and I'm concerned I'm underfeeding it. First of all, the big one chases it to the back of the tank at feeding time, and it cowers back there, not coming forward to beg with the other fish. Secondly, it ignores sinking pellets when you drop them on top of it. With the corys and the raphael, nothing stays on the bottom of the tank for very long, so it has no opportunity to find pellets later. The only food it goes for when you drop it are frozen larvae. If you target feed it bloodworms, it eats them (and everything else in the tank also goes nuts).
Its behaviour has noticeably changed in the six or so weeks I've had it -- when I first aquired the fish, it would eat sinking pellets without any trouble, and would catch them before the corys did. Now it doesn't. It hasn't grown a lot, and its underside is slightly concave. Often, it sits lethargically at the back of the tank, although as I write this today, it's being a little more active. The big ram is nosey and curious and races in for food at feeding time.
Myself and my partner are discussing options, but we really don't know what's best: setting up a small quarantine-style tank and putting the small ram in there, although running two tanks long-term isn't something we really want to do at this second; rehoming the fish, either with the LFS I bought it from, or anyone who would take it on; or continuing to feed it bloodworms and hope it improves.
What do the experts think?