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Re: community killi tank, substrate Q



I've had absolutely no problem keeping my gardneri (nsukka), e. chaperi, and 
lamp eyes together in a community tank...along with several (mostly) 
peaceful species of cichlids, some mollies, and tetras.  the gardneri don't 
mess with any of the other fish.  the chaperi occupy the upper layer of 
water, and will nip fins on other slow moving fish who live in the same area 
(such as guppies)...but never mess with other fish.  my tank is 45 gallons.

i'm not an expert on interbreeding, but as far as i understand, as long as 
you don't mix fish from the same species family (Aphyosemions, Epiplatys, 
Nothos, Fundulopanchax, Cynolebias, etc.) you should be set.  i'm not 
positive of this, but i'm fairly confident.

as for substrate, i'm just using regular aquarium gravel...not really 
encouraging killie breeding in the community tank.


>From: Paul Cezanne <oblique at alum_mit.edu>
>Reply-To: killietalk at aka_org
>To: killietalk at aka_org
>Subject: community killi tank, substrate Q
>Date: Tue, 1 Jan 2002 21:28:03 -0500
>
>I was at my LFS this weekend and I finally saw several different species of 
>killi at once.  Most of my exposure has been via photographs on the 
>Internet!
>
>Ok, so I want to set up a community killi tank.  This is particularly 
>fortunate since I was planning to setup my office tank this last weekend.  
>(The flu prevented that.)
>
>Anyway...
>
>I keep only one species of killi, Fundulopanchax Scheeli.  At the LFS they 
>had australe orange, Rivilus XXXX, Epilatus XXXX, and Lampeye XXXX.  Oh, 
>there was a single Gardinari that was a mean SOB and supposedly there was a 
>Blue Gularis in the store but I never saw it.  (Yeah, it is a pretty good 
>store... :-)
>
>First, I loved them all, especially the Rivilus.  I was next struck by how 
>each of the layer of the tank was occupied, the australe and Rivilus hung 
>out on the bottom, the Lampeyes in the middle, the Scheeli go everywhere.
>
>Now I have no guarantee that any of these will be in the store when I 
>finally get the tank setup.  So instead of asking are these a good mix, a 
>better question is how can I tell what are good species to mix together?
>
>Secondly, how can I tell if the species will interbreed?  I have no desire 
>to create hybrids, what is a good rule of thumb for determining if species 
>interbreed?  At least with all the fish above, the females were 
>distinguishable from each other in case I wanted to breed them.  (I'm 
>pretty resigned to the fact that no breeding will take place in this tank.  
>I assume that any fry would prey for other species (or their parents) and 
>that the snails and/or bottom feeders will most likely prevent any eggs 
>from hatching at all, yum, yum)
>
>Finally, the most pressing question, what substrate should I use?  I'm a 
>big fan of Flourite in my planted tanks but I've never used it with 
>substrate spawners before. It is a fairly sharp substrate and when I watch 
>my Scheeli's spawn, she really gets pressed into the gravel.  I have no 
>problem layering it, but what should I put on top?  I'm currently fond of 
>playground sand, is this a good substrate for killies?
>
>Oh, the tank is a 29 gallon tank, fairly tall, but it is what I have.
>
>Thanks for listening.
>
>--
>pZ -- Paul Cezanne
>Please visit http://www.customline.com/peace/ and think about what is 
>there.
>
>
>---------------
>See http://www.aka.org/AKA/subkillietalk.html to unsubscribe
>Join the AKA at http://www.aka.org/AKA/Applic.htm


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