Festae questions

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No, I see where the confusion lies. I meant that the only fish I have now is the Texas, I definitely wasn’t going to put anything small in there with him. If anything I was going to raise up some tank mates and add him when they were almost his size. I finally got enough room and have been blessed with no more rent, so I can reasonably have almost all of the aquariums that I’ve been wanting. The wet spot has four different types of Festae, so I was planning on ordering a couple and have them in separate aquariums but I’m trying to figure out what tank mates. I can always move them if need be.
 
Im gonna go on a limb and say he most likely won't like what he's hearing on here with adding small festae to a pretty close to full grown Texas tank that will go bananas on them one by one!
Will also add, he probably didn't think about asking before purchasing these festae knowing he was going to put them in the tank with the Texas.

When I had these guys, I kept them in a large group in a 6ft tank as a species only. Few females grew faster than males and terrorized the whole tank of the group. When I separated a pair, the male got his revenge after he let the dominant female lay eggs and killed her right after. Shame on me for not having the divider in the tank.
I’ve had them twice and both times it failed spectacularly in a 220g, both chicks slaughtered the males and this wackadoodle murdered everyone during the night while she protected her eggs. She always laid them vertically on the side of the overflows.
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To me, Festae require an entire tank to themselves as adults, they are not fit to be housed with any other cichlids¨.(and especially if you want them to exhibit true colors)
These cichlids (as indcated by their isolation west of the Andes), are loners (excpet when paired.)
My males easily hit over 12¨, so a 6 ft tank for them would be minimal just for a pair.
and........Keeping them togther with a similar Mexican cichlid such as Herichthys is an exercise in futility, as they both are the dominent cichlid in their own geographic habitat, each species vying for territory in thelimits of a tiny glas box
Neither cichlid species are really community cichlid candidates.
I have kept both festae, and a number of those from the genus Herichthys and would not keep them in the same tank as mature adults.
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No, I see where the confusion lies. I meant that the only fish I have now is the Texas, I definitely wasn’t going to put anything small in there with him. If anything I was going to raise up some tank mates and add him when they were almost his size. I finally got enough room and have been blessed with no more rent, so I can reasonably have almost all of the aquariums that I’ve been wanting. The wet spot has four different types of Festae, so I was planning on ordering a couple and have them in separate aquariums but I’m trying to figure out what tank mates. I can always move them if need be.
What size tank will the group be in?

I had a group of rio guayas
 
To me a 220 would be perfect for just an adult pair, a 350 even better with some large west of Andes Characins such as Brycon, or Bryconamericus as dither fish.
Some of these tetras reach over 12¨, and are fast enough to avoid festae in larger tanks.
I have used these type larger Characins with predatory loner cichlids, and Gobies in my Panamanian tanks.

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This is a juvie Brycon, as adult they can almost reach 8 lbs.


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Although these Characins are large, they don´t compete directly for the same territory
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To me a 220 would be perfect for just an adult pair, a 350 even better with some large west of Andes Characins such as Brycon, or Bryconamericus as dither fish.
Some of these tetras reach over 12¨, and are fast enough to avoid festae in larger tanks.
I have used these type larger Characins with predatory loner cichlids, and Gobies in my Panamanian tanks.

View attachment 1570241

This is a juvie Brycon, as adult they can almost reach 8 lbs.


View attachment 1570243
Although these Characins are large, they don´t compete directly for the same territory
View attachment 1570244
View attachment 1570245
A 220 would be ok for a pair if you had something that occupy the top portion. A 180 gallon would suffice unless a school of larger silver dollars were to be used as dithers.

Brycons would be nice but I would do a larger tank in length with them.
 
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