Stocking 30 gallon?

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So. I said I couldn’t get a larger tank for my fish. And it was true... when I said it a week or so ago. Now I have a 30(technically 28-ish) gallon tank bought for my birthday. It is currently cycling. I have 3 Buenos Aires tetras in my old 10 gallon, and once the tank is cycled, I plan to complete their school by adding 3-4 more. I also plan on getting Corydoras.

How many Cory Cats should I get? I know you’re supposed to get 6(schooling fish and all that), but my dad(I am still living at home due to being a minor) says no to that, so could I get away with 3?

What other fish could I get in the tank? Maybe a colorful fish of some sort to act as a “centerpiece fish”? My LPS is PetSmart, so nothing too uncommon because I won’t find it there?
 
I would not do less than 5 corycats, as less will have them very nervous and they are a lot more likely to hide. What about a larger species of shrimp, like Amano shrimp? You could do a smaller type of pleco, like bristlenose, clown, or rubber lip.
 
If you intend Corydoras, it must be a group, and while five or six is often suggested as "minimum" a few more will mean healthier cories, and you have the space here. This is a very social fish, living in groups of hundreds, and it must have a group in an aquarium. Fish health is linked to numbers when it comes to shoaling/schooling fish. They also do better with a smooth sand substrate.
 
If you intend Corydoras, it must be a group, and while five or six is often suggested as "minimum" a few more will mean healthier cories, and you have the space here. This is a very social fish, living in groups of hundreds, and it must have a group in an aquarium. Fish health is linked to numbers when it comes to shoaling/schooling fish. They also do better with a smooth sand substrate.
Thank you! If my dad says no, I might just end up with a breeding pair or a pregnant female(happened last time I got fish, might happen again), but since the odds of that are probably low I’ll try to convince him.
 
Seriously Fish, the website with the best reputation for fish profiles.

I might just end up with a breeding pair or a pregnant female
Do you mean cories? They don't form breeding pairs and the females don't get pregnant - they lay eggs and a male is needed to fertilise them.
 
Do you mean cories? They don't form breeding pairs and the females don't get pregnant - they lay eggs and a male is needed to fertilise them.
I know, but I didn’t have a better word for what happened when I got my BA tetras(which was I got two, and ended up with a third swimming around)(assumed that the tetras were both female but could be male and female)(idk petsmart is strange like that)

And by “breeding pair” I really meant “a pair that can breed”, not “mate for life” type breeding pair. I should have been more specific, sorry.
 
If I can’t get enough cories for a school, due to Divine Parental Ruling, is there another bottom feeder I could get that is ok on it’s own or with one partner?

I might end up with only a few cories, which I know is not ideal but how does it affect them? Are they constantly swimming together in a group or do they just need to come across another one of their kind while puttering around the tank?
 
I might end up with only a few cories, which I know is not ideal but how does it affect them? Are they constantly swimming together in a group or do they just need to come across another one of their kind while puttering around the tank?

Avoiding a course in fish biology, I will try to explain this as briefly as I can.
A species of freshwater fish that lives in groups of its own species can be termed shoaling or schooling. Regardless of which term may be the correct one, the principle behind it is the same. This trait is imbedded into the species' DNA. All sorts of other inherent traits and behaviours and needs are also programmed into the species' DNA. So as the fish grows, it "expects" specific things to be part of its life. When one or more of these traits is missing, it affects the fish's well-being. As the citation [in green in my signature] from Paul Loiselle says, "It is inhumane to deprive any animal of an element it regards as critical to its well-being, and totally naive to expect normal behavior in its absence." Aside from direct interference to the functioning of the fish's metabolism (depending upon the factor missing), this causes stress.

Stress is the root cause of almost all disease and health problems of aquarium fish. Today we recognize that the health of any living organism is directly related to the level of stress inflicted upon it; for fish this is a major problem because the fish cannot do anything to reduce or eliminate it—they can only fight it or succumb to it. Our fish are confined to the small space of their aquarium, and only the aquarist can control their environment. In a very real sense, we are directly responsible for any and all stress inflicted upon the fish. We must understand what stress is and how it harms our fish. Here is how Biology Online defines stress:

The sum of the biological reactions to any adverse stimulus—physical, mental or emotional, internal or external—that tends to disturb the organisms homeostasis; should these compensating reactions be inadequate or inappropriate, they may lead to disorders.​

Homeostasis is defined as “the tendency of an organism or a cell to regulate its internal conditions, usually by a system of feedback controls, so as to stabilize health and functioning, regardless of the outside changing conditions.” Physiological homeostasis, or physical equilibrium, is the internal process animals use to maintain their health and life: “the complex chain of internal chemical reactions that keep the pH of its blood steady, its tissues fed, and the immune system functioning” (Muha, 2006). Stress makes it more difficult for the fish to regulate the normal day-to-day physiological functions—the homeostasis—that are essential to its life.

So, in a nutshell, denying the fish a group of its own is creating an adverse situation that the fish cannot escape from, and which will slowly debilitate its health.
 
Avoiding a course in fish biology, I will try to explain this as briefly as I can.
A species of freshwater fish that lives in groups of its own species can be termed shoaling or schooling. Regardless of which term may be the correct one, the principle behind it is the same. This trait is imbedded into the species' DNA. All sorts of other inherent traits and behaviours and needs are also programmed into the species' DNA. So as the fish grows, it "expects" specific things to be part of its life. When one or more of these traits is missing, it affects the fish's well-being. As the citation [in green in my signature] from Paul Loiselle says, "It is inhumane to deprive any animal of an element it regards as critical to its well-being, and totally naive to expect normal behavior in its absence." Aside from direct interference to the functioning of the fish's metabolism (depending upon the factor missing), this causes stress.

Stress is the root cause of almost all disease and health problems of aquarium fish. Today we recognize that the health of any living organism is directly related to the level of stress inflicted upon it; for fish this is a major problem because the fish cannot do anything to reduce or eliminate it—they can only fight it or succumb to it. Our fish are confined to the small space of their aquarium, and only the aquarist can control their environment. In a very real sense, we are directly responsible for any and all stress inflicted upon the fish. We must understand what stress is and how it harms our fish. Here is how Biology Online defines stress:

The sum of the biological reactions to any adverse stimulus—physical, mental or emotional, internal or external—that tends to disturb the organisms homeostasis; should these compensating reactions be inadequate or inappropriate, they may lead to disorders.​

Homeostasis is defined as “the tendency of an organism or a cell to regulate its internal conditions, usually by a system of feedback controls, so as to stabilize health and functioning, regardless of the outside changing conditions.” Physiological homeostasis, or physical equilibrium, is the internal process animals use to maintain their health and life: “the complex chain of internal chemical reactions that keep the pH of its blood steady, its tissues fed, and the immune system functioning” (Muha, 2006). Stress makes it more difficult for the fish to regulate the normal day-to-day physiological functions—the homeostasis—that are essential to its life.

So, in a nutshell, denying the fish a group of its own is creating an adverse situation that the fish cannot escape from, and which will slowly debilitate its health.
Thank you, I did not know that. Now I have some solid arguments for more cories under my belt
 

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