Plecos are one of the hardiest fish I know. Also, I see roughly 10 goldfish in A 10 gallon tank. You should not put 1 in a 10 gallon.
OP stated in the previous post that the tank in the photo is a 55 gallon. Still not great, but please read properly if you intend on chastising them at all.Plecos are one of the hardiest fish I know. Also, I see roughly 10 goldfish in A 10 gallon tank. You should not put 1 in a 10 gallon.
Just to clarify -- the problems happened in a 55-gallon school tank. I use the 10-gal for myself.
Watch them shortly before, during and after you feed the tank. If you notice any chasing, guarding food or other behaviours that indicate one plec is keeping the other away from food, then you'll know.If there are any ways that I could know that a pleco is starving besides flipping its stomach up and observing it that way, please let me know -- I hope people can realize that I don't want this to happen either.
I can swear that the bruising didn't happen until this week. As I attend school five days out of seven, I see the fish basically every day, and I couldn't notice anything wrong with them until I can see their stomach when they stuck onto the glass -- which brings me back to the question: how can I notice them attacking each other and that they're starving without manually checking their bellies?
General care for plecos involves:though I'd still very much like to know the answer of how to take care of plecos.