Do I have too many fish???

crazygurl29

crazygurl29
Jul 19, 2009
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0
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I have a 29gal tank with 2 dwarf gouramis, 1 dinosaur eel, 2 zebra danios, 3 blood finned tetras, 1 black neon tetra and an algea eater. Is that too many fish? Can I add more fish???
 
I wouldn't say you have too many, but the species of fish that you have grow very large.

The dinosaur eel will need at least a 50 gallon tank, so will the algae eater (these are MINIMUM) everything else is fine.

I suggest you return the algae eater and eel back to the store, and add more danios and tetras.

There might be aggression issues between the gourami's as well.
 
What kind of algae eater do you have? If it is just a siamese algae eater or something like that and not a pleco you may be able to keep it.
 
A true SAE will need more space than a 29 gallon IMO when full grown. And not all plecos get to the same size, so if it is a species that stays around 4-5" I think the OP will be ok.

A chinese algae eater, on the other hand, would not be suitable for this tank size.
 
I have a 29gal tank with 2 dwarf gouramis, 1 dinosaur eel, 2 zebra danios, 3 blood finned tetras, 1 black neon tetra and an algea eater. Is that too many fish? Can I add more fish???
:welcome: to AC, Crazygurl29!

What gender are your dwarf gouramis? If both are males, then you may have to isolate the other one. In my experience, dwarf gouramis tend to be obnoxious when they build their bubblenest out of plant scraps, algae, etc which they paste together and become extremely territorial in the process. I had one in my pond previously and it would attack my hand everytime I handle something in the pond.:pc: Males can be distinguished by their vivid coloration whereas females are simply plain silver although it is always the males that are available nowadays.

If this dinosaur eel is one of the bichirs, could you please post a photo or tell us what species this one is? A 29g can support a senegal or delhezi bichir but you need to consider your other fish as bichirs are ambush predators and since these ones also reach 12 inches and over in size depending on the species, the other tankmates may eventually be eaten especially as they fit well in the mouths of the bichirs. Even if they don't, your bichir may attempt to "death roll" them thus either way, your other fish won't stand a chance with it at all.

Could you please post a photo of the "algae eater" as well? Yes, it could be otocinclus catfish, common plecostomus, Chinese algae eater (Gyrinocheilus aymonieri) or Siamese algae eater. All except the common plecos and CAE will work in the 29g.

If you have any more questions, please do not hesitate to ask.:thumbsup:
 
Did you post this thread before and it get deleted? Cause I think I posted in it. Anyway this is my opinion:

Dwarf Gouramis- As other posters have said, 2 males will stress/harass each other. You should return one if they are both males.
1 Dinosaur Eel- I googled around and if it's the fish I found (which isn't truly an eel) then it gets to about a foot in length and needs a bigger tank.
2 Zebra Danios- Bump the group up to 5.
3 Blood Finned Tetras- Bump the group up to 5
1 Black Neon Tetra- Bump the group up to 6 or 8
Algae Eater- I believe in your last post you called it sucker fish, which suggests a Pleco. If you can, take a pic to help us ID it. If it was labeled as a "Sucker fish" then it's most likely a "common" pleco, which gets too big for a 29g tank.

Suggested Stock:

- Dwarf Gourami
- 5 Zebra Danios
- 6 Blood Fin Tetras
- 8 Black Neon Tetras
- 1 Clown or Bristlenose Pleco (They stay small) or a group of cories such as Julis or Pygmy. About 4-7 would be good.

BTW, I want to thank you for mentioning Black Neon Tetras. After googling what they were I saw how cool they are, and when I saw them for sale today I just had to have some. Nine, actually. :raspberry:
 
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