thank you for you advice, my tank is only 46L so i really can't have any more or i would be over stocked, with 5 guppies.N0body Of The Goat said:It might be ill, but it might be simply down to having too few Corydoras sterbai.
I started with 12 a few years back, sadly two developed a milky fungal/bacterial infection and did not recover, but the other 10 tended to hand out together. When I then mixed them with 11 Brochis spendens, they became far more confident and it was great to see them "flock" across the floor of the Rio240... I do regret rehoming them all, but at the time I had far less tanks I suddenly became aware that I had too many fish long term and too many of them were species that stayed at or near the tank floor.
5 Guppies can live in that tank for live without issue (unless you get a population explosion ), but Corydoras sterbai need something much bigger for life, with a footprint (base) of at least 80x40cm or 90x30cm. Adult C. sterbai are quite chunky catfish as adults and they should be kept in social numbers.rita1 said:
thank you for you advice, my tank is only 46L so i really can't have any more or i would be over stocked, with 5 guppiesIt might be ill, but it might be simply down to having too few Corydoras sterbai.
I started with 12 a few years back, sadly two developed a milky fungal/bacterial infection and did not recover, but the other 10 tended to hand out together. When I then mixed them with 11 Brochis spendens, they became far more confident and it was great to see them "flock" across the floor of the Rio240... I do regret rehoming them all, but at the time I had far less tanks I suddenly became aware that I had too many fish long term and too many of them were species that stayed at or near the tank floor.