So, I went to the dentists to get 2 of my 9 new fillings in (groan, 4 shots of Nova still didn't take away all the pain...) and I couldn't help but notice their large, rather overstocked, badly stocked, and (AFAIK) under filtered tank. IDK what the size is, but it looked to be about 50(min)-70(max) gallons total.
The stocking for the tank is as follows:
-8 small angels (3in tall, 2in long)
-8-10 bleeding heart tetras (1in long)
-6-10 neon tetras (1/2in long - 1in long)
-2 Red Parrots (4in long, 3in long)
-8 Unknown cats, look like Striped Raphael (about 2-3in long)
-1 pleco (1 and 1/2ft long!)
So 33 fish total. If the pleco only counts as one. Which, IMO, it doesn't. Counts as 3-4 all by itself, IMO, so 37 fish total.
No filtration that I could see. One airstone, no lights, fake plants, fake sunken ship, small heater (have the same thing in my 30gal).
Now, the pleco alone is way to much for the tank to handle, size wise only. Add the angels, oh my oh my! Plus the Striped Raphael Cats and you have 3 fish right there that will probably outgrow the tank because of their needs or aggression. The neons will become Angelfish food, and the bleeding hearts will just end up suffering for it all. Finally, the Red Parrots will almost certainly die...
THe signs were already showing. One of the angels was swimming funny, the pleco was breathing very heavily (may be natural, IDK), and one of the Red Parrots seems to have difficulty swimming upright, the smaller one. It stood on it's nose for a few moments and seemed to struggle to get back to the level. That was sad, that was. The cats were being nipped by something (maybe each other?) and I think the angels were as well.
This isn't the first time I've seen their tank, but every time I go it has a new set of resident. Last time it was a tank full of oscars, plus the pleco. Before that, they had (I think) a number of fancy goldfish. The pleco was there back then as well, so maybe they just moved the fish out. IMO, the tank probably crashed and they just wanted to get some pretty fish, and the pleco just managed to survive all that.
Now, I do not know that actual gallonage of the tank, or if it does indeed have a filter (I didn't see anything that looked even slightly like a filter or filter intake) but I do know that the fish will outgrow the tank, and are incompatible. (angel + neon = full bellied angel)
Here is what Aquadvisor had to say if the tank is only 45-50gallons:
Note: Common Pleco needs driftwood.
Warning: Common Pleco is not recommended for your tank - it may eventually outgrow your tank space, potentially reaching up to 18 inches.
Warning: Neon Tetra may become food for Angelfish.
Warning: Stripped Raphael Catish is not recommended for your tank - it may eventually outgrow your tank space, potentially reaching up to 7.5 inches.
Warning: Blood Parrot is not recommended for your tank - it may eventually outgrow your tank space, potentially reaching up to 8 inches.
Warning: Your selected species may eventually require 795% of your aquarium space. You may need to deal with territorial aggressions later on. Try removing some of (Pterygoplichthys pardalis, Pterophyllum scalare, Platydoras armatulus, Blood Parrot) or get a larger tank.
Your tank is too small - it will require massive amount of frequent water changes each week!
Your aquarium stocking level is 555%.
Your tank is seriously overstocked. Unless this setup is temporary, you should consider a larger tank.
Link
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Here is what Aquadvisor says if the tank is 67 gallons (what I think the max size of tank is)
Note: Common Pleco needs driftwood.
Warning: Common Pleco is not recommended for your tank - it may eventually outgrow your tank space, potentially reaching up to 18 inches.
Warning: Neon Tetra may become food for Angelfish.
Warning: Blood Parrot is not recommended for your tank - it may eventually outgrow your tank space, potentially reaching up to 8 inches.
Warning: Your selected species may eventually require 663% of your aquarium space. You may need to deal with territorial aggressions later on. Try removing some of (Pterygoplichthys pardalis, Pterophyllum scalare, Platydoras armatulus, Blood Parrot) or get a larger tank.
Your tank is too small - it will require massive amount of frequent water changes each week!
Your aquarium stocking level is 462%.
Your tank is seriously overstocked. Unless this setup is temporary, you should consider a larger tank.
Link
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I, being a quiet, non-agressive person, just walked out the door and started on a plan to find a way to talk to them about getting the fish removed/rehomed. I would even volunteer to buy the fish from them and set their tank up so the fish WON"T die. Haven't actually spoken with them, but that may come soon.
I can't keep anything but the tetras, but I can rehome all the fish. Course, that's assuming the dentists place actually gives a ****, which they probably don't (unless the fish cost to much to keep).
So, what would you do?
The stocking for the tank is as follows:
-8 small angels (3in tall, 2in long)
-8-10 bleeding heart tetras (1in long)
-6-10 neon tetras (1/2in long - 1in long)
-2 Red Parrots (4in long, 3in long)
-8 Unknown cats, look like Striped Raphael (about 2-3in long)
-1 pleco (1 and 1/2ft long!)
So 33 fish total. If the pleco only counts as one. Which, IMO, it doesn't. Counts as 3-4 all by itself, IMO, so 37 fish total.
No filtration that I could see. One airstone, no lights, fake plants, fake sunken ship, small heater (have the same thing in my 30gal).
Now, the pleco alone is way to much for the tank to handle, size wise only. Add the angels, oh my oh my! Plus the Striped Raphael Cats and you have 3 fish right there that will probably outgrow the tank because of their needs or aggression. The neons will become Angelfish food, and the bleeding hearts will just end up suffering for it all. Finally, the Red Parrots will almost certainly die...
THe signs were already showing. One of the angels was swimming funny, the pleco was breathing very heavily (may be natural, IDK), and one of the Red Parrots seems to have difficulty swimming upright, the smaller one. It stood on it's nose for a few moments and seemed to struggle to get back to the level. That was sad, that was. The cats were being nipped by something (maybe each other?) and I think the angels were as well.
This isn't the first time I've seen their tank, but every time I go it has a new set of resident. Last time it was a tank full of oscars, plus the pleco. Before that, they had (I think) a number of fancy goldfish. The pleco was there back then as well, so maybe they just moved the fish out. IMO, the tank probably crashed and they just wanted to get some pretty fish, and the pleco just managed to survive all that.
Now, I do not know that actual gallonage of the tank, or if it does indeed have a filter (I didn't see anything that looked even slightly like a filter or filter intake) but I do know that the fish will outgrow the tank, and are incompatible. (angel + neon = full bellied angel)
Here is what Aquadvisor had to say if the tank is only 45-50gallons:
Note: Common Pleco needs driftwood.
Warning: Common Pleco is not recommended for your tank - it may eventually outgrow your tank space, potentially reaching up to 18 inches.
Warning: Neon Tetra may become food for Angelfish.
Warning: Stripped Raphael Catish is not recommended for your tank - it may eventually outgrow your tank space, potentially reaching up to 7.5 inches.
Warning: Blood Parrot is not recommended for your tank - it may eventually outgrow your tank space, potentially reaching up to 8 inches.
Warning: Your selected species may eventually require 795% of your aquarium space. You may need to deal with territorial aggressions later on. Try removing some of (Pterygoplichthys pardalis, Pterophyllum scalare, Platydoras armatulus, Blood Parrot) or get a larger tank.
Your tank is too small - it will require massive amount of frequent water changes each week!
Your aquarium stocking level is 555%.
Your tank is seriously overstocked. Unless this setup is temporary, you should consider a larger tank.
Link
_____________________________________________
Here is what Aquadvisor says if the tank is 67 gallons (what I think the max size of tank is)
Note: Common Pleco needs driftwood.
Warning: Common Pleco is not recommended for your tank - it may eventually outgrow your tank space, potentially reaching up to 18 inches.
Warning: Neon Tetra may become food for Angelfish.
Warning: Blood Parrot is not recommended for your tank - it may eventually outgrow your tank space, potentially reaching up to 8 inches.
Warning: Your selected species may eventually require 663% of your aquarium space. You may need to deal with territorial aggressions later on. Try removing some of (Pterygoplichthys pardalis, Pterophyllum scalare, Platydoras armatulus, Blood Parrot) or get a larger tank.
Your tank is too small - it will require massive amount of frequent water changes each week!
Your aquarium stocking level is 462%.
Your tank is seriously overstocked. Unless this setup is temporary, you should consider a larger tank.
Link
_____________________________________________
I, being a quiet, non-agressive person, just walked out the door and started on a plan to find a way to talk to them about getting the fish removed/rehomed. I would even volunteer to buy the fish from them and set their tank up so the fish WON"T die. Haven't actually spoken with them, but that may come soon.
I can't keep anything but the tetras, but I can rehome all the fish. Course, that's assuming the dentists place actually gives a ****, which they probably don't (unless the fish cost to much to keep).
So, what would you do?