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Redo


Benjansss

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After all my goldfish died in a disaster I'm planning to redo the stock completely as a mock tropical with cold water guppies paradise fish algae eaters gold/brown leopard fish and mountain minnows if anyone has any good tips on these kinds of fish or any other non goldfish cold water fish around (non native ) please let me know :f77: :f77: :f77:

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You are not listening to a word you are being told by very experienced fish keepers. Given you lost your goldfish in a disaster I would have thought you would be keen to avoid a further one.

You can not do a tropical looking tank with cold water fish. The bright coloured fish are all tropical to some degree.

Why would you want to buy fish and put them through pain and distress, then decide they need to be re-homed?

I suggest you do some extensive research on the internet before you even think about buying more. Read at least six articles from different websites on each type of fish then take the information which constantly appears.

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Gold algae eaters are not cold water 23.3 - 26.1 degrees celcius and grow to 30cm.

Phalloceros caudimaculatus are subtropical - a few will survive in low temperatures, others live in 35 degrees. 15 - 20 degrees celcius is optimum for them.

So you have two fish with different requirements.

There's no point in debating the issue - you need to do some research and if you want a cold water tank get true cold water fish. Then you will need a chiller to keep it cold in the summer months.

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Just because you've done something a certain way for a while, doesn't mean that's the way the fish is suppose to live long term. Keeping a fish tank should be about thrive, not survive.

+1 to Adrienne. If you want a coldwater, get definite coldwater/subtropical fish that THRIVE in 18-20 degrees. Otherwise put the other fish like your golden algae eater and guppies in a tropical tank.

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We're honestly not trying to be mean here. This is just what these types of fish basically need.

I have a coldwater tank, and the fish need an extremely high current, plenty of oxygen, and a way to keep cool in summer. I'm lucky in that there's an HRV system in my house, and it keeps the room temp down, and subsequently, keeps the coldwater tank at 20C at the most. When I first started and was living elsewhere, the tank would easily get up to 24-25C even without a heater, and well out of the sun.

A coldwater tank is not just a tropical setup without a heater, these fish have their own requirements and certain compatibilities too, and you need to research those carefully.

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You're not listening. We're not telling you to put a heater in the tank for the tropical fish. You need to take the fish that require warmer temps out of the tank, as they do not suit colder water.

There's no point putting a heater in for the tropical fish, as it will make things worse for the coldwater fish. It needs to be one or the other.

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