Oscar Equipment & Maintenance

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shaun the

Feeder Fish
Jun 26, 2014
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wanghiston
The Oscar is a South American cichlid also known as the Velvet Cichlid, Peacock Cichlid, or Walnut Cichlid. unfortunately, the common name "Peacock Cichlid" can be confusing since the term "Peacock" is also often used in the names of many Aulonocara species from Lake Malawi in the Rift Valley in Eastern Africa, and several species of the Cichla genus from South America are also called "Peacock Cichlids." In the early 1800's the Oscar was given the Latin name Lobotes ocellatus, but this has been updated to Astronotus ocellatus, a hopefully more accurate name.

Oscars are fairly large fish, typically reaching lengths between twelve and sixteen inches (thirty to forty centimeters). These fish generally live for eight to twelve years, depending on the quality of care given
To keep your Oscar healthy in your home aquarium, remember to provide them with plenty of clean, warm water. Your Oscar's temperature should be about 77° Fahrenheit (25° Celsius), and ideally should remain between 74° and 81° F (23.5° and 27° C), so you need an aquarium heater and a thermometer. Keeping your Oscar too warm for long periods of time will result in Oxygen deprivation, which can cause nerve damage, heart damage, and can seriously hamper the immune system. Keeping them too cool or exposing them to sudden chill can also hamper their immune system. An impaired immune system makes them more susceptible to many diseases, from easily treatable Ick to more difficult diseases such as hole-in-the-head.

Your Oscar aquarium should provide at least 30 gallons of space (about 114 liters) per Oscar, plus any space needed for any other fish. A minimum fish tank size of 40 gallons (about 152 liters) is recommended if you are keeping an Oscar.

Oscars are very messy fish, so fish tank maintenance is paramount. Perform your weekly 10-15% water changes, so that your Oscar always has clean water and the waste that is not processed by the aquarium filter is removed. Your Oscar needs good filtration to keep the water from becoming toxic, and you need to keep the filter(s) well maintained. When selecting a filter, remember to make sure that the filter provides excess filtration for a fish tank with the large capacity that your Oscar requires. Many people use multiple smaller filters to maintain a large aquarium like this. Using several smaller filters allows you to stagger your filter maintenance so that you are not changing all of your filter media at once and risking cycling your fish tank again. Remember, it is very important that your filters provide filtration in excess of your total aquarium volume.
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Here's a 13 inch oscar in a 5 foot long 90 gallon aquarium.

[video=youtube_share;5ttec1F2idQ]http://youtu.be/5ttec1F2idQ[/video]

I wouldn't recommend putting an oscar of any size in a 30 gallon, even as a juvenile. They grow rapidly and will become stunted or ill in such a small volume of water.
 
I would also recommend testing the water for nitrates to dictate the % of water changed. I can assure you that a 13 inch oscar in a 30 gallon will need daily water changes >10-15% to keep nitrates under control.
 
Not sure where the op got or copied this info.. but it wasnt from an experienced Oscar keeper. Oscars do best in temps of 80-84. The minimum size to keep an Oscar long term, to get the most of size, coloration and longevity is 4ft and 75gals of tank. The more water changes you do, the better the fish will do. 75% weekly is required for adult Oscars. There are other water quality issues besides nitrate to consider. Dissolved solids, metabolites. Cichlids excrete a growth inhibiting hormone in their urine and Oscars defecate and urinate constantly. My source of info is pure experience, I am in my 5th decade of Oscar keeping and currently have 5, including a breeding pair. 4 are well over a foot long, none more than 2.5 yrs old. Tankspace, pristine water and superior diet are the major keys to growing big Oscars and having them live 15yrs.
 
10-15 % water change is not sufficient for an oscar as well has keeping one in a 40 gallon tank.

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Minimum tank size of 75 gallon and 30-50% weekly water changes for an oscar. This sounds like petsmart advice. (Same place the recommended tank size for an ID shark is 55 gallons, which we all know is beyond cruel.)
 
Not trying to bash, but his first post was teaching the expert oscar keepers how to keep an oscar lol..
 
Sad he took the time to post this would have been better served doing a wc

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