It can depend, your rays tend to be able to kept together, however most cichlids are territorial so sometimes the only option you have is to go huge in order to keep them together...and most people aren't content with just one cichlid, so tank size wise it can equalize.Gshock;4794604; said:To be honest, I know next to nothing on cichlids. Correct me if I'm wrong, but the majority of cichlids do not require tanks as big as the ones rays require. If that is the case, generally, the tank one ray requires is VERY different than the tank one cichlid requires. Even in your extreme example, I highly doubt a clown loach is going to match the size of a grown motoro. Point being it takes a lot more commitment to upgrade a tank for a ray than to upgrade a tank for a cichlid.
But the key word is commitment as you mentioned, the levels are the same if you know what you are getting yourself into beforehand, if you are talking more than just financially. Sure it may not be some tank that is wide and long (that's not my definition of what defines committed,) but in the end you both are committed just the same as you have the same goal in mind, trying to provide as best for your fish as possible.
That being said, I do plan on raising rays later on and if your knowledge is as good as jeffers says it is, then hopefully we can talk again then.

