Question for big dreamers:

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
How bout a white to even the score?:naughty: :naughty: :naughty:

awwwww wait, not big enough hehehehehehehehe

Juuussst messin with ya LOL

Hmmmm lets see........ I dunno, I will have to think about this one!
 
Chad55;540407; said:
I may be flammed for saying this but I would do atleast 100 convicts....but that is just for the feeders. Then I would deffinatly get all the monsters like RTC, TSN, Marbled cat, some monster pikes would be stunning....and some giant sevs of all varieties. I think the giant school of convicts would be cool though because they would get massive and you would have tons of feeders and you would see lots of natural behaviors.

Chad

Chad makes a good point here. Even if you went down the arapaima, TSN, RTC, etc. route, a smaller fast breeding cichlid would be a great addition and a lot more natural. Big fish eat small fish, so why not have a whole load of Cons breed in there, instead of having to find feeders. It would add more visual interest too. And I like the idea of watching the "natural behaviours"!
Arapaimag has cichlids breeding as feeders in his big tanks, so the example is already there and working.
BTW, did Zoodiver say the tank would be 14' deep? That'll be another wetsuit job then...!
 
rottbo;540889; said:
if i had a school of cons in a tank that big i would want more than a hundred i would also have a huge school of firemouths but it would be rays aros and larger cichlids for me... with a decent sized root ssytem in one corner for all of the smaller feeders to hide in and breed...

With that depth and that many gallons to play with, you could create your own mini ecosystem! Well, not quite, but you could have a lot of different environments, a lot of hiding places, so a lot of different sized fish.
Don't know about the tetras mentioned earlier though...maybe too small. Mind you, on a recent trip to Deep Sea World Aquarium over near Edinburgh, they had little tetras in with massive pirahna (BIG teeth!). They had plenty of space (big display), P's were fed well and didn't seem to bother the tiddlers....
 
Ok, right off the bat I will say this: NO PACU. As soon as you have them, anyone who gets one at Wal Mart and realizes they can't keep it will push it on you. I don't want that. In two years, it would turn into a 125,000 gallon pacu tank. Nobody wants to pay to see a pacu display.

Only one person mentioned herps - which I like. I was think both Podocnemis expansa and unifilis. (I've got a line on both already.)

The comments about various micro habitats are right in line with what I was thinking. With systems this large, you can safely keep animals that would kill each other in a smaller tank.

Arapaima for sure - two or three. I have to rework a nasty corner, but we can do it.
I was also thinking 2 redtails and 2 tiger shovels. Maybe a fork snout cat (aka rip saw cat).
Maybe a handfull of silver arowana.
Rays are a must. I've tried to carve out a name for myself in the zoo world with my ray collections. So, to keep up with that, I'm going to obtain a pretty wide collection for this. There is a lot of floor space with this exhibit.
Peacock bass are a favorite of mine, so there will have to be a pack of them.
For 'filler', I was thinking a few types of silver dollar - especially red hooks and barred.
Nobody has mentioned triangle cichlids (Uarau). I love those things. Other medium cichlids would do well, too. Managuense, Dempsy and maybe a few geos. I was also thinking of a group of banded leoporinus. They get to be fairly good size, and will add alot of color.

Keep them coming.

And Em, no whites. They're over rated. I'll stick to my bulls (If they ever break down and let me collect them). :D
 
i didnt know we were talking about plants too... I'd have one back corner with a root system for the same reasons as zoodiver. it would be like a mangrove forest. and I agree... i hate pacus... so no pacus period.
 
bmxer4ever;540905; said:
With that depth and that many gallons to play with, you could create your own mini ecosystem! Well, not quite, but you could have a lot of different environments, a lot of hiding places, so a lot of different sized fish.
Don't know about the tetras mentioned earlier though...maybe too small. Mind you, on a recent trip to Deep Sea World Aquarium over near Edinburgh, they had little tetras in with massive pirahna (BIG teeth!). They had plenty of space (big display), P's were fed well and didn't seem to bother the tiddlers....

I think the small tetras would work... the other big guys would be acclimated to prawn and cut fish... no feeders except my massive school of convicts.
 
I would keep it simple.

A good mix of potamotrygons, quite a few arowanas and a really large school of wild brown or heckel discus.

It would be stunning.

Colin
 
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