lol.No clue what you are saying. Many people keep clown loaches for multiple decades. Perhaps you are replying to a specific post but without context it sounds more like giberish.
Don’t miss out on the best deals of the season! Shop now 🎁
lol.No clue what you are saying. Many people keep clown loaches for multiple decades. Perhaps you are replying to a specific post but without context it sounds more like giberish.
Thanks for the confirmation.lol.
I would think i tworks fine to keep 8 clown loaches in a 400 gallon tank; but your statement seems to imply that clown loaches are simply too large for any size tank... or perhaps i misunderstood.I'll take a guess that my gibberish was my saying something you disagreed with. I'm glad to debate the merits of buying small fish that grow large - everyone says they'll get a larger tank but very few do. It needlessly causes fish deaths.
Saying you have no clue is a weak start to any debate, but I'll assume you were trying to squash any discussion with the "giberish" line. Them's fighting words!
Fighting's boring. So give me solid, experience-based reasons why buying fish guaranteed to outgrow almost everyone's set up is a wise idea. The fact they are cute (which is why I made this fish buying mistake 30 years ago - their cuteness is undeniable) isn't good enough. Why think short term for fish that live and grow longterm? If they are seen as just fish and disposable ornamental products, that's a common enough approach. It's not mine - when I have fish for a while I grow to like them more and more. I don't have any tanks l;arger than 2m, 6 feet, so I won't make the clown loach mistake again.
Where are you coming from here? I'm listening.
I would prefer it if the only aquarium fish we could get, grew to no longer than 6 inches. However, people want different things including big predatory fishes.Where is there a size limit for a fish in a tank?
I would think i tworks fine to keep 8 clown loaches in a 400 gallon tank; but your statement seems to imply that clown loaches are simply too large for any size tank... or perhaps i misunderstood.
Old thread I know but just seen it as don't get here very often.
I have six Clown Loaches in a 6 foot, 700 litre tank and for years they have been absolutely fine: no ammonia, no nitrites and enough nitrates to keep the Vallisnaria going for years too; weekly water changes. I haven't added any new fish, new decorations or anything new at all for over five years but all of a sudden I have a major problem. My largest Clowns are having serious skin problems and look like their skin is sloughing off, like a snake's. I looked online but there was nothing useful so I phoned my LFS and found an experienced Clown Loach owner who had had this problem himself some fifteen years ago and actually lost one of his fish before he found out the problem. I took a water sample to him and he tested it for all the usual -- all fine -- but he suspected the pH was off and tested it. It was below 5 (as far as his test kit would go) and was exactly the same problem he had. The answer? Crushed oyster shells. I have put some in tonight and will see how the fish are tomorrow.
As I understand it:
Apparently, the pH of the water here in Cornwall is artificially 7 but there is no calcium carbonate in the water and as such the pH drops over years as the substrate loses its CC to the tank water. The acidity increases to the point where clown loaches can no longer tolerate it and they reach a tipping point where they will die within a few days if nothing is done. After his water checks revealed the low pH I bought some crushed oyster shell and put them in the filter this evening. I will update over the next couple of days in case anyone else comes across this with their Clowns.
Wow, a gorgeous feller. Great, dark colour with those white edges. Only found out recently that they change colour depending on the substrate you have... Interesting trait, goes well with such an interesting fish.Here is a poor pic with most of the clowns hiding, sorry.
View attachment 153291