Nice setup. I particularly like the sowrdtails as well. How many did you have in total, how big was the tank, and what other tankmates did you have?
Thanks. The swords were wild Rio otapa. I had 12 helleri but I moved them to my 7 foot tank eventually. The tank shown was four foot. They lived quite happily in the 4 foot for at least 2 years before moving them to the bigger tank.Nice setup. I particularly like the sowrdtails as well. How many did you have in total, how big was the tank, and what other tankmates did you have?
I wondered if the Meeki variety was more hardy. They certainly seem popular.I have kept 4 Thoritchthys species (meeki, aureus, maculipinnis, pasionis), and like the aureus and maculpinnis color combination best for subtle red and extensive sparkles through out the body. Aureus and maculpinnis are very similar in look and not easy to tell apart. Although Meeks has the strongest red, it lacks sparkles so it is less attractive to me. Pasionis aka yellow firemouth lacks the firing color of the other 3 and is too plain looking to me. Meeki is the most hardy species, having been domesticated the longest time. Not so with other species which are susceptible to disease in my experience.
Not always the case as many are over bred and produce weak lines.I wondered if the Meeki variety was more hardy. They certainly seem popular.
I had heard that about some of those. They are from a bit cooler environments. I run my current tank at 78. That seems to be a common default.Not always the case as many are over bred and produce weak lines.
Most fair better at lower temps, around 72 ,73 except Meeki and passionis. They seam to fair better at around 77 , 78.
Keep the others too warm and you will shorten the life span.
I would probably argue that in a lot of cases the reverse is true. The fact that they have been bred for so long by fish farms etc,means that there are lots of washed out ,grey weak strains that are far from robust and healthy.Half of Mexico is in the subtropical zone, and there are central highlands that have altitude cooling effect. Fishes collected from these areas are subtropical, and prefer cooler temp. The reason Meeki is more hardy than other newer Thorichthys is due to length of domestication. Wild caught or F1/2 Meeki won’t be as hardy, but few want to pay high price for wild Meeki when domesticated strain has been around for 100 year