If you're doing it for money purposes down the road simple and easy is the best. Less obstructions in the tank, bare bottom, high filtration etc..trying to catch fish in a tank that has tons of plants, rocks and whatever else can be infuriating and if you do go with tons of plants more than likely you'll be uprooting them to get them out of the way to catch fish you want to take out.
If this is just a casual venture scape the tank to your liking and adjust on the fly as you determine what works well for you.
One thing to keep in mind is bioload. I know a lot of breeders who have crashed tanks after fish grow into a bigger size (not adults mind you) and lost entire tanks full of fish. The bigger the tank the better. Sometimes life can throw curveballs and that day you had scheduled for maintenance suddenly becomes a day or two later and now you have a mess on your hands, it can happen that fast.
More frequent water changes, feeding well and live foods are all keys to success for robust colorful healthy fish. Fry do well with high quality water and quality food.
Talk to breeders of the fish you plan to breed yourself. Find out what their methods are, water parameters, food, lighting, mops, plants, caves, temps, m/f ratio etc etc and give yourself a baseline to work from. Most importantly, be patient because none of us can exactly replicate what someone else is doing. Your water may be the same TDS as mine but my chemical makeup is different.
Good luck and have fun
If this is just a casual venture scape the tank to your liking and adjust on the fly as you determine what works well for you.
One thing to keep in mind is bioload. I know a lot of breeders who have crashed tanks after fish grow into a bigger size (not adults mind you) and lost entire tanks full of fish. The bigger the tank the better. Sometimes life can throw curveballs and that day you had scheduled for maintenance suddenly becomes a day or two later and now you have a mess on your hands, it can happen that fast.
More frequent water changes, feeding well and live foods are all keys to success for robust colorful healthy fish. Fry do well with high quality water and quality food.
Talk to breeders of the fish you plan to breed yourself. Find out what their methods are, water parameters, food, lighting, mops, plants, caves, temps, m/f ratio etc etc and give yourself a baseline to work from. Most importantly, be patient because none of us can exactly replicate what someone else is doing. Your water may be the same TDS as mine but my chemical makeup is different.
Good luck and have fun