Sewelia tank set-up 112 litres
Moderator: LoachForumModerators
Sewelia tank set-up 112 litres
Hi all,
I am planing to set-up a 112 lit (2x 18 watt T-8 )river tank for the Sewelia lineolata (how many?)
There will be some other species in as Tulomelania sp. Yellow snails, Neritina sp. Zebra and Atya gabonensis shrimp and some sort of a shoaling fish to fill the upper part of the river (not decided yet).
I will not be creating a strong jet flow but I will make sure to get a very good water turn over rate. Instead of jet pumps I will add one Koralia Nano which propels 900 l/h. Plus, I will have 1 x 600l/h AquaEl sponge power head.
Substarte will be quartz sand 0,5mm well uniformed (round) with some river pebles here and there. Huge rocks will go in the background (lots of them). Rock name is I believe Fossilized Wood (can't wait to start aquascaping).
I will aslo add a few branches of Curio Wood just to spice up the underwater drama
I would like to plant some Crinum calamistratum at the sides and some Anubias nana in between the rocks just to add some green to it.
To start the biological process I will be using a sponge from one of my mature tanks (I will also rinse a dirty songe into the aqurium) to Jump Start the system. I will also add some Hygrophila polysperma to help keep low any possible NH4 (which I will remove after a month or so). At the start I will only use the sponge power head and add the Koralia Propeler head after a month (otherwise it will blow away the Hygrophila plants).
Thanks for reading!
Any tips?
Kind regards, Dusko
I am planing to set-up a 112 lit (2x 18 watt T-8 )river tank for the Sewelia lineolata (how many?)
There will be some other species in as Tulomelania sp. Yellow snails, Neritina sp. Zebra and Atya gabonensis shrimp and some sort of a shoaling fish to fill the upper part of the river (not decided yet).
I will not be creating a strong jet flow but I will make sure to get a very good water turn over rate. Instead of jet pumps I will add one Koralia Nano which propels 900 l/h. Plus, I will have 1 x 600l/h AquaEl sponge power head.
Substarte will be quartz sand 0,5mm well uniformed (round) with some river pebles here and there. Huge rocks will go in the background (lots of them). Rock name is I believe Fossilized Wood (can't wait to start aquascaping).
I will aslo add a few branches of Curio Wood just to spice up the underwater drama
I would like to plant some Crinum calamistratum at the sides and some Anubias nana in between the rocks just to add some green to it.
To start the biological process I will be using a sponge from one of my mature tanks (I will also rinse a dirty songe into the aqurium) to Jump Start the system. I will also add some Hygrophila polysperma to help keep low any possible NH4 (which I will remove after a month or so). At the start I will only use the sponge power head and add the Koralia Propeler head after a month (otherwise it will blow away the Hygrophila plants).
Thanks for reading!
Any tips?
Kind regards, Dusko
- Jim Powers
- Posts: 5208
- Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2005 6:15 pm
- Location: Bloomington, Indiana
water added 2010.05.01
Hallo friends
Here is how the tank look at the moment;
I am Jump Starting this tank. I added mature filter media from my established tank.
I will leave this tank as it is for about 2 weeks and then I will add the shoal of Vietnamese Minnow.
Here is how the tank look at the moment;
I am Jump Starting this tank. I added mature filter media from my established tank.
I will leave this tank as it is for about 2 weeks and then I will add the shoal of Vietnamese Minnow.
Correct me if im wrong but isnt there a huge temperature gap between Hillstreams and Tylomelania snails?
Hillies are a cooler water species and the tylomelania snails live and thrive in temperatures between 27 degrees celcius to 32 or possibly more, because of the hot springs in their native lakes.
I keep tylomelania snails myself and they tend to go into a state of sleep, and barely move if the temperature drops below 26.
Therefore i would not recommend hillies and tylomelania snails together, as it would be a huge compromise for one or both of them.
Hillies are a cooler water species and the tylomelania snails live and thrive in temperatures between 27 degrees celcius to 32 or possibly more, because of the hot springs in their native lakes.
I keep tylomelania snails myself and they tend to go into a state of sleep, and barely move if the temperature drops below 26.
Therefore i would not recommend hillies and tylomelania snails together, as it would be a huge compromise for one or both of them.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 62 guests