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I would go for a Satanoperca Daemon tank with a really big group of about 10. I'd consider adding a group of Uaru with them as well. A big school of disk tetras like a Bleeding Heart - subtle colours but bright red dot, some Hemiodus Gracillis (I think thats the red striped one) and a large group of Flagtail Catfish, I'd also (if I was pushing the boat out) have an L095 because they are awesomeWhich eartheater would you put in an aquarium that is 8 feet long and 4 feet wide; and what other fishes would you put with it ?
The gallons isn't so useful but the size is 8 feet long and 4 feet wide - so not super huge. The one on the other side of the room is 10 feet long and 4 feet wide but that is for the clownloaches and i guess i'll toss the festums in there so they aren't with the geo (per earlier posts); Sad thing is i really need a low current geo so i can put the festum in the geo aquarium since the loaches will go wild with a lot of current.I think 450 gallons is so hard for me to picture I get a bit carried away. I have to admit I've only kept Winemilleri long term, I did have a Daemon singularly for a while - really nice fish but was the only one in a store I saw and came away with it (don't judge me we've all done it haha!) Went to a member on here near Leeds if I remember correctly.
I understand the plant thing with Uaru, I have a really strong memory from when I was probably 5 or 6 of seeing what I now know were Uaru in a pet shop so always tug at my heart strings a bit, but probably wont ever get a chance to keep them. In a nice Aquarium Design Group style tank they could look great though.
Wills
So flow is of course relative - the current flow is around 6 gph and i could easily up to it to 10 gph but when i think of raging river i think 30 or 50 gph.I can't think of any low flow Geophagus, but it doesn't mean they don't adapt to quieter water. You'll get more aggressive behavior in a slow tank, and maybe need to stock less. In a slow tank, you won't get sediment over the sand as you would in nature. Well, if you can reach into that tank and keep it clean, you won't...
Some Apistogramma like slower water, and they are Geophagines. But somehow, I have yet to meet an aquarist who would use an eight footer for Apistos. !
I 'm guessing the festum is a festivus? And the earlier posts were another thread? I kept Mesonauta egregius with red head Geos, and had no problem except they outgrew the tank and had to be passed along to a friend. They dealt with the conditions very well - no problem I could see. What was the objection in the other thread?
If you have a laminar flow pump, you could upset a mesonauta, but like angels (often in underwater video with geos in the wild) they handle some flow easily. You can crank up the flow in an eight footer better than in a small tank, but you don't need a strong current for Geos. They like it, but it doesn't seem essential to their behaviour or well being (unless you can get the rapids ones, which are bad customers in slow water).
BTW - I'm one of those purists who says we shouldn't make fish adapt to us. So when I talk about a geo adjusting to slower water, it's because in my experience, it is not a problem for them as long as the sand on the bottom is clear for them to work it over, and the stocking is restrained.
Yep would be a *lot* of work and that is why i am using a drip system....In a 120 with 5 Geos, I had to do 50% twice a week. That's a lot of water. Those fish in a 250 would have fallen to once a week, but I don't have the space. In a tank the size of yours, big water changes would be a lot of work.
Scapeing a large tank like what is in this video would be an interesting task. It won't happen with my initial setup but i might be able to add spider driftwood over time so maybe after a few years it will get more branchy. Won't be able to change the substrate from sand to mud but if i can find some non-leaching leaves it could form mud over time - maybe oak leaves.I have never fished in Amazonia, but I have kept a lot of Geos, and watched a lot of underwater video from a good friend who goes regularly.
First, Retroculus have a reduced swim bladder to be rapids fish. I kept them with a 20 times turnover but gave them to a friend (I was just growing them out) who had a large tank that could have a current in it.
Hole in the head is an issue. It's why I would understock, according to many. It takes a lot of water changing to control. In any water, from medium hard down, water changing is the only way to fight it. There's a reason why I have no Geos now...
In a 120 with 5 Geos, I had to do 50% twice a week. That's a lot of water. Those fish in a 250 would have fallen to once a week, but I don't have the space. In a tank the size of yours, big water changes would be a lot of work.
This is a brilliant video.