Lucidahandwriting
New Member
Heya, new to the forum. I'm pretty advanced in aquarium stuff, but i'm making a tank for a friend and i was looking for the right fish for his vibes. I'll give you guys some info on the tank:
Tank is 60L, with the hardscape in the photo, it's alder wood, some rocks and super-fine sand (like a tenth of a mm) taken from a well, and some leaf litter on the bottom. Considering the wood and the leaves, the water will be slightly yellowish, but we may revert that with some activated carbon.
The tank has an open top.
Sand and rocks are slightly calcareous and water here is hard, so for simplicity we're going to make a hardwater tank.
The tank will be heavily planted, mostly with epiphytes like anubias, bucephalandra, christmas moss on the wood, some dense background plant and a lot of emersed growth on the tank sides and on top of the tree stumps.
Temperature is also a factor: no heater is planned, but his house is pretty well-insulated, not going below 18°C in winter and not above 28° in summer.
Friend has time to feed the fish regularly.
Fish with a high reproduction rate may be a problem: in such an intricate setup it would be impossible to catch the extra fish, and giving them away would be pretty stressful for my fren.
Other preference on the fish would be: interesting color, small size and a curious, active and "Exploring" behavior, like that of corydoras or poecilids (which we sadly can't keep due to tank size/coldwater/hardwater and reproduction rates respectively).
Do you guys have some ideas?
Thanks and sorry for the bible lol
Tank is 60L, with the hardscape in the photo, it's alder wood, some rocks and super-fine sand (like a tenth of a mm) taken from a well, and some leaf litter on the bottom. Considering the wood and the leaves, the water will be slightly yellowish, but we may revert that with some activated carbon.
The tank has an open top.
Sand and rocks are slightly calcareous and water here is hard, so for simplicity we're going to make a hardwater tank.
The tank will be heavily planted, mostly with epiphytes like anubias, bucephalandra, christmas moss on the wood, some dense background plant and a lot of emersed growth on the tank sides and on top of the tree stumps.
Temperature is also a factor: no heater is planned, but his house is pretty well-insulated, not going below 18°C in winter and not above 28° in summer.
Friend has time to feed the fish regularly.
Fish with a high reproduction rate may be a problem: in such an intricate setup it would be impossible to catch the extra fish, and giving them away would be pretty stressful for my fren.
Other preference on the fish would be: interesting color, small size and a curious, active and "Exploring" behavior, like that of corydoras or poecilids (which we sadly can't keep due to tank size/coldwater/hardwater and reproduction rates respectively).
Do you guys have some ideas?
Thanks and sorry for the bible lol