240 Gallon exotic stocking

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
Birchirs are very adaptable (mine is in hard water) but they will eat anything they can fit in their mouths, which is quite a lot when fully grown. And as they hunt at night they can ambush most fish while they ate dormant. Just for info.
 
I think it could work with adult cichlids. I kept a large ornate with cichlids ranging in size from about 6" to 14" in a 6' tank with no problem. Ornate was over a foot long. But like stated they will eat anything they can fit, or even almost fit. I also had a Senegal bichir choke on a pictus catfish that was much too big for it, and both died. You might want to stick with large haplochromis species, the 5"ish peacocks could possibly become a meal depending on the ornate's size.
 
I think it could work with adult cichlids. I kept a large ornate with cichlids ranging in size from about 6" to 14" in a 6' tank with no problem. Ornate was over a foot long. But like stated they will eat anything they can fit, or even almost fit. I also had a Senegal bichir choke on a pictus catfish that was much too big for it, and both died. You might want to stick with large haplochromis species, the 5"ish peacocks could possibly become a meal depending on the ornate's size.
Whenever I get the 240gallon I plan on letting it run for about a week or two so o have time to test the water and get everything to where it should be before I get the fish I plan on getting them all around the same time, would you guys recommended I quarantine them for a few days in my old 40 gallon or what would you guys recommend the best way to acculmate them into the tank
 
Whenever I get the 240gallon I plan on letting it run for about a week or two so o have time to test the water and get everything to where it should be before I get the fish I plan on getting them all around the same time, would you guys recommended I quarantine them for a few days in my old 40 gallon or what would you guys recommend the best way to acculmate them into the tank

What are your plans to cycle the tank? old media?
 
I was planning 2 Black ghost knife fish, 1 ornate Bichir, 1 dragon goby, 2 Redfin Prochilodus, 1 German red peacock, and 1 dragon blood peacock,

2 knife fishes dont work out together. U wane keep 1 or 0
dragon goby' while a lot of people say that they are brackish they are truly freshwater fish. Unless they are wild caught. But u dont wane mix them up with these fish because of their waterperimeters.
Those peacocks, u will need to go for a peacock only tank if u wane do that.
Redfin Prochilodus are from America.
ornate are from Africa.

U should not keep peacocks with a bichirs. The water perimeters are very different and it will not be good for ur fishes.

Peacock:
Temperature: 25 – 29 °C

pH: 7.5 – 9.0

Hardness: 179 – 447 ppm

Bichir:
Temperature: 72-82°F (22-28°C)

pH: 6.0-8.0

Hardness: 5-25 dH

U will see that the hardness is very different. I would not recommend keeping them together.
 
I was planning 2 Black ghost knife fish, 1 ornate Bichir, 1 dragon goby, 2 Redfin Prochilodus, 1 German red peacock, and 1 dragon blood peacock,

2 knife fishes dont work out together. U wane keep 1 or 0
dragon goby' while a lot of people say that they are brackish they are truly freshwater fish. Unless they are wild caught. But u dont wane mix them up with these fish because of their waterperimeters.
Those peacocks, u will need to go for a peacock only tank if u wane do that.
Redfin Prochilodus are from America.
ornate are from Africa.

U should not keep peacocks with a bichirs. The water perimeters are very different and it will not be good for ur fishes.

Peacock:
Temperature: 25 – 29 °C

pH: 7.5 – 9.0

Hardness: 179 – 447 ppm

Bichir:
Temperature: 72-82°F (22-28°C)

pH: 6.0-8.0

Hardness: 5-25 dH

U will see that the hardness is very different. I would not recommend keeping them together.

Dragon gobies are brackish,and they r all wild caught.
 
Dragon gobies are brackish,and they r all wild caught.
'That's correct, however unless those fish are wild-caught or have been kept and bred in true brackish water, they are *not* from costal environments. They have been bred for countless generations in salt-free environments. Their ancestors may have lived in brackish water at times, but their descendants have not.'

if u search I find a lot of people who say that u need to keep them in freshwater depending on the grower. I dont know how u found that they are all wild caught but I can not find anything about them only being wildcaught
 
'That's correct, however unless those fish are wild-caught or have been kept and bred in true brackish water, they are *not* from costal environments. They have been bred for countless generations in salt-free environments. Their ancestors may have lived in brackish water at times, but their descendants have not.'

if u search I find a lot of people who say that u need to keep them in freshwater depending on the grower. I dont know how u found that they are all wild caught but I can not find anything about them only being wildcaught
There is a freshwater variety,however it is seldom offered and gets much bigger(3-4feet), however that is beyond the scope of this discussion,and where are any of the dragon gobies captive bred?
 
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