I am really wanting to get into some breeding with Apistos and Rams, maybe some other small fish, too! I will be setting up a 6 foot self-built wood aquarium stand/shelving unit for 3 levels of 6 10 gallon tanks all linked together. The bottom of the rack will have one 20 gallon tank and the sump (some type of "rubbermaid-style" container or a 40 gallon breeder tank). I plan to hook each level of tanks together with pvc pipe syphons (well below water level) and use overflow boxes to drain each level down to the next level, finally ending in the sump. I will use sponges to keep fish from changing tanks via syphon tubes, etc. It will end up being a 200 gallons worth of active tanks all linked together (not counting the sump itself).
I am trying to decide on filtration. I plan to heavily use plants but will not be using CO2 injection. I will use my well water which is about 0.6 KH, and just under 6.0 pH. I will probably have to stick with moderate lighting and dose ferts minimally without adding CO2. I know most people don't decorate their tanks when dedicated to breeding fish, but I want a decent looking setup also. The wood rack will be nicely done and the tanks all aquascaped separately (nature/bio-tope style).
I was looking at the Pentair Aquatics "Lifeguard" filtration system. Anyone have experience with it? Would I be better served with another type of filtration? I was thinking of around 500 to 600gph pump turnover. Would this be too much for breeding 10 gallon tanks? remember that they are all linked together. I just don't see the efficiency of having a separate bubble filter in each tank. I would also lose the small amount of CO2 I want to retain in the water. Would adding 2 or 3 good canisters to my sump do the job better? Should I still worry about adding air stones to some of the tanks? Any other suggestions?
Thanks.
I am trying to decide on filtration. I plan to heavily use plants but will not be using CO2 injection. I will use my well water which is about 0.6 KH, and just under 6.0 pH. I will probably have to stick with moderate lighting and dose ferts minimally without adding CO2. I know most people don't decorate their tanks when dedicated to breeding fish, but I want a decent looking setup also. The wood rack will be nicely done and the tanks all aquascaped separately (nature/bio-tope style).
I was looking at the Pentair Aquatics "Lifeguard" filtration system. Anyone have experience with it? Would I be better served with another type of filtration? I was thinking of around 500 to 600gph pump turnover. Would this be too much for breeding 10 gallon tanks? remember that they are all linked together. I just don't see the efficiency of having a separate bubble filter in each tank. I would also lose the small amount of CO2 I want to retain in the water. Would adding 2 or 3 good canisters to my sump do the job better? Should I still worry about adding air stones to some of the tanks? Any other suggestions?
Thanks.