Hello,
I have a 55 gallon "long" freshwater planted tank with 4 remaining elderly tetras. I'm not adding anything else to the tank until they all die. At that point I'm not sure what I want to keep in the aquarium and I'm looking for suggestions.
I am not interested in having a large variety of species at this point. I just want something interesting. I prefer a lot of plants but I don't have to have them if that's not what's best for the animal. My water is soft and starts out neutral from the tap but gets acidic fairly quickly. I am willing to do brackish water but I have never adjusted for hardness so I would be nervous about doing that. I want something that will be fairly hardy for the water I have, or be okay with brackish.
Things I've considered:
If you were going to do a lightly stocked, possibly species-only aquarium or paludarium, what would you do? Thanks.
I wasn't sure where to post this as it seems to cross several categories (tropical, oddballs, planted, brackish). I chose this because the tank is currently a tropical one.
I have a 55 gallon "long" freshwater planted tank with 4 remaining elderly tetras. I'm not adding anything else to the tank until they all die. At that point I'm not sure what I want to keep in the aquarium and I'm looking for suggestions.
I am not interested in having a large variety of species at this point. I just want something interesting. I prefer a lot of plants but I don't have to have them if that's not what's best for the animal. My water is soft and starts out neutral from the tap but gets acidic fairly quickly. I am willing to do brackish water but I have never adjusted for hardness so I would be nervous about doing that. I want something that will be fairly hardy for the water I have, or be okay with brackish.
Things I've considered:
- One or two betta fish (perhaps one male, 2 females, or even just one single fish, male or female doesn't matter) in a heavily planted tank. Biggest downside I can see: bettas don't roam much if they are by themselves. They seem to need something else in the tank to make them want to leave their one little corner. At least the few I've had and seen have been that way. Maybe just a female-only population of 2 or 3?
- One pea puffer or up to 6 depending on what's best for them. I've read they are psychotic little jerks that will murder any other tank inhabitants but I think they're adorable. I'd be happy to let one have the run of the tank. I've also read that they prefer a heavily planted tank and can live with other puffers if they have enough space. I would consider putting as many as 4 -6 in there together if anyone has had experience with this and has had no trouble with fighting that led to stress or injury.
- Fiddler crabs. This would be really fun to set up the tank as half water and half land. I'm a little intimidated about the cleaning process and getting the water back to the right salinity. I've never messed with water parameters before and I am terrified of harming the animals with my ineptitude. Also, I might be looking for something a little more low-maintenance. But dang they're cute. And it really would be so fun to set up the tank.
- Shell dwellers if I can find them available. They prefer harder water so I'd have to supplement with cichlid water additive I think. But again, I'd be nervous to do that since I haven't done so before. Their behavior is fantastic though and I can imagine hours of just watching them be adorable.
- Set up a paludarium tank. This is very tempting to me. I have no idea what species I would or could keep in such an environment but I am worried about gnats, mold and other unwanted things that result from the moist environment. I'll read more about it but I'm very interested in this option.
If you were going to do a lightly stocked, possibly species-only aquarium or paludarium, what would you do? Thanks.
I wasn't sure where to post this as it seems to cross several categories (tropical, oddballs, planted, brackish). I chose this because the tank is currently a tropical one.