New to Keeping Loaches, Buying a New Aquarium
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New to Keeping Loaches, Buying a New Aquarium
I'm interested in buying a 20 or 30 gallon tank to house a species or two of loaches. I don't want to use sand so I'm looking at species that do well with gravel. I'll also be introducing a species to a newly cycled tank so I'm looking for something hardy.
I'd like to only add one species for now and leave room for further additions later. I was thinking of getting a group of zebra or yoyo loaches. Are there other species that grow to a max of 4" that would do will in a small tank like these? I'm hesitant towards buying the 20 because it's so small.
Any suggestions are appreciated!
I'd like to only add one species for now and leave room for further additions later. I was thinking of getting a group of zebra or yoyo loaches. Are there other species that grow to a max of 4" that would do will in a small tank like these? I'm hesitant towards buying the 20 because it's so small.
Any suggestions are appreciated!
- redshark1
- Posts: 585
- Joined: Sun Dec 26, 2010 6:58 am
- Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, Great Britain.
Re: New to Keeping Loaches, Buying a New Aquarium
I can think of no better aquarium fish than the Clown Loach, but for a smaller tank I would whole-heartedly recommend Botia sidthimunkii / Dwarf Chain Loach. This has many of the atributes that make the Clown Loach such a wonderful aquarium fish in a miniturised package.
As you know, regarding aquariums, the bigger the better. I feel 20g is tiny and cramped for active fish.
As you know, regarding aquariums, the bigger the better. I feel 20g is tiny and cramped for active fish.
6 x Clown Loaches all 30 years of age on 01.01.2024, largest 11.5", 2 large females, 4 smaller males, aquarium 6' x 18" x 18" 400 ltr/90 uk gal/110 US gal. approx.
Re: New to Keeping Loaches, Buying a New Aquarium
20 to 30 gallons is too small for yoyo's for sure but I agree that sids would be ok however they're hard to find and expensive.
Personally I would go up to a 40 gallon breeder tank which gives you a big footprint. This gives you more surface area on top
for gas exchange and more room on the bottom which is where your loaches will be. With a 40 gallon you could swing some
striatas or kubatai as they stay smaller than yoyos and don't grow as fast. I have 8 striatas and 7 or so rummy nose tetras in a 40 gallon
breeder and they are doing great.
Also I'm not a fan of adding loaches as the first fish after a cycle. I would put what ever dither fish you want
in there first for a good month or so before adding loaches. Loaches can be pretty sensitive to new tanks
and you could very easily end up with ich right away.
I would also add some kind of live plant to your tank. Live plants cut down on some of the water quality swings you
can have. Every tank I setup now has some kind of live plant, even if it is just a bit of java moss.
Also craigs list is a great place to find cheap aquariums, then shop ebay for a good filter. Good luck with your tank,
you came to the right place for advice !
Personally I would go up to a 40 gallon breeder tank which gives you a big footprint. This gives you more surface area on top
for gas exchange and more room on the bottom which is where your loaches will be. With a 40 gallon you could swing some
striatas or kubatai as they stay smaller than yoyos and don't grow as fast. I have 8 striatas and 7 or so rummy nose tetras in a 40 gallon
breeder and they are doing great.
Also I'm not a fan of adding loaches as the first fish after a cycle. I would put what ever dither fish you want
in there first for a good month or so before adding loaches. Loaches can be pretty sensitive to new tanks
and you could very easily end up with ich right away.
I would also add some kind of live plant to your tank. Live plants cut down on some of the water quality swings you
can have. Every tank I setup now has some kind of live plant, even if it is just a bit of java moss.
Also craigs list is a great place to find cheap aquariums, then shop ebay for a good filter. Good luck with your tank,
you came to the right place for advice !
Re: New to Keeping Loaches, Buying a New Aquarium
Sids are wonderful, a 20g long (30 inches long) is the smallest tank I think works for them, they are very active. I wouldn't keep striatas or larger botia type loaches in such a small tank. Yoyos or kubotai get too big, a 4 ft tank is a minimum for me but maybe a "breeder tank" for striatas & sids.
Pangios (kulhis) are neat , you could keep 2 species, say 6 of a striped species with 6 "brown" or "black".
There are other non-botia loaches that are cool too. I have yunnanilus cruciatus & rosy loaches in a planted 20 long with Eco Complete. And hillstream loaches are interesting if you want to go with a river tank set up.
Pangios (kulhis) are neat , you could keep 2 species, say 6 of a striped species with 6 "brown" or "black".
There are other non-botia loaches that are cool too. I have yunnanilus cruciatus & rosy loaches in a planted 20 long with Eco Complete. And hillstream loaches are interesting if you want to go with a river tank set up.
