question about tiger barbs

iamsquatty

AC Members
Sep 4, 2006
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huntsville, AL
i've got 7 tiger barbs, 4 albinos and 3 regulars. i also have a 55 gal aquarium. the tigers are now starting to challenge each other for dominance and establish a pecking order. only problem is, the littlest tiger, an albino, keeps getting picked on by the other larger ones, and i think they are nipping at his back fins. we have him in a little quarantine tank, but should we keep him in the qt or let him stay in the aquarium so they can work it out themselves?

the reason we decided to put him in the qt was because he has been being chased for the past few days and i dont know if he is just tired or hasnt been able to eat (i dont think he's sick, nothing about him looks different physically besides his tail fin being nipped), but he started slowing down.

thanks
 
Are those the only fish in the 55?

I'm not a barb expert, but I think you will need to have more of each to ease the aggression, probably 6-8 of at least. Plus others.
 
ok, here is an update. ive been watching him, and he is just trying to stay in one place, he is alot more pale than the other albino barbs, and if he turns the right way, it almost looks like his scales are slightly pineconing, but his belly is not huge, so i dont know if that is the first sign of dropsy or not?

any suggestions?
 
ive got other fish in there also.

do you recommend trying to cure it or just letting him go on his own? should i remove him from the floating quarantine tank in my regular tank or can i keep him in the floating qt? will it spread to other fish?
 
I have a tiger barb species only tank, and there is certainly a pecking rank in the school. The out fish is not the smallest, but the others don't pick on him. He stays by himself.

I agree that you might find a bigger school to help with the aggression. If you could fit even two more in there you'd notice a difference.

Also, tiger barbs are little piggys and can eat enough to get all bloated and sluggish. If you think it is dropsy take him out and put him in a hospital tank. It will also help reduce stress from getting picked at so he will have a chance of recovering.
 
My tank became much less aggressive when the size of my "school" got over 20 - you could probably handle that in a 55 gallon.
 
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