Here's my 55 gallon. I've tried to redo it to be more river-like, with added filtration and a bit of a current, and with lots of hiding places. The sids and rasboras love it! They are always busy exploring or playing in the current.

In this tank are the rasbora espei's (about 25?)

Two SAE's

and 11 sidthimunki

there are also two danio kyathit. I would love to find a few more, but for now they school with the rasboras.
Here is the 40 gallon pangio tank. Thanks to many of you for help in setting this one up! it's grown into a chaotic jungle of crypts and java fern

I have several species of pangio in here. Here is a myersi, possible kuhli, and a pangio pulla

here's my crazy patterned kuhli, along with a pangio I bought from Franks Aquarium as a pulla... I'm not so sure what he really is

here's both pullas (??) along with one of the oblongas. See how different they look?

The tank is also home to a few boraras mehra, and two corydoras arcuatus.
Also a few amano shrimp.

What started off as a few berried cherry shrimp...

turned into this!

Fortunately, I'm able to sell a lot of them locally, so the fish don't have to put up with this all the time!
Most of these pictures are a few weeks old, but the two full tank shots I took on Sunday to commemorate a memorable day. The Aquatic Gardner's Convention was held here over the weekend, and I was a volunteer. After the banquet on Saturday night, I finally got a friend to introduce me to Takashi Amano, because I was too shy to ask him to sign my book. We talked briefly, and he asked if he could come to my house and photograph my tanks and interview me for a column about "women in the hobby" in his magazine!
I only got two hours sleep that night, trying to get the tanks clean and the plants trimmed and the house presentable! Let this be a lesson - always keep your tanks looking nice - you never know who might be coming to visit!
Mr. Amano was kind enough to not comment on my aquascaping, but he did seem to like the sidthimunkis

