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| FAQs on
Colisa lalia "Dwarf" Gouramis
of Many Names, Honey, Flames, Neon Blue, Sunset Fire...
Compatibility Related Articles: Anabantoids/Gouramis
& Relatives, Genera
Ctenopoma & Microctenopoma,
Betta splendens/Siamese
Fighting Fish,
Related FAQs: Dwarf
Gouramis, Dwarf Gourami Identification,
Dwarf Gourami Behavior,
Dwarf Gourami Selection, Dwarf Gourami Systems,
Dwarf Gourami Feeding,
Dwarf Gourami Disease, Dwarf Gourami
Reproduction, & FAQs on: Gouramis 1,
Gouramis 2,
Gourami Identification,
Gourami Behavior,
Gourami Compatibility,
Gourami Selection,
Gourami Systems,
Gourami Feeding,
Gourami Disease,
Gourami Reproduction,
Betta splendens/Siamese
Fighting Fish, |
Usually Colisa gouramis get along with most everybody...
But every now and then there's a "rogue" individual that must be
isolated, placed with larger, meaner, faster tankmates.
|
Dwarf Gourami, sys., comp.
12/21/08 Hey all. I have 2 well established tanks. One a 50 gallon
tank with several species, including Fire Dwarf Gouramis (3) and Dwarf Gouramis
(4). They've lived well together in this tank with 3 types of tetras and an
albino bristlenose Pleco. I also have a 120 gallon tank with 4 powder blue dwarf
gouramis, 2 types of Corys, 4 clown loaches, some neon tetras and 6 Glofish. I
wanted to introduce the 7 from the smaller tank into the much larger tank. They
seem cramped in the 50 gallon. I have about 20 bunch plants and 3 large pieces
of driftwood in the larger tank, so there's plenty of cover, but I want to make
sure I won't have any problems between the gouramis before I do this. So far, as
they sit, I haven't had any aggressive behavior from any of them. Can you
help me? Thanks. Sorry for not including the scientific names of the fish. I
hope this doesn't hinder your ability to answer the question. <Greetings.
Powder Blue, Fire Dwarf and regular Dwarf gouramis are all the same species,
Colisa lalia. Males are mutually aggressive, so when combined, there's always a
risk of fighting. In cramped spaces it may be impossible for males to define
territories, and because of this, aggression between individuals is relatively
low. This is standard practise when certain types of fish such as Mbuna cichlids
are being kept. In the big 120 gallon tank things might change. So while I would
expect your plan to work, there is a small risk that some of the males may
become territory holders. The four already in the 120 gallon may have
territories already, but because the tank is comparatively big, those
territories don't overlap, and fighting is minimal. Add the seven other
specimens, and tempers may get frayed. Certainly, I'd consider moving the rocks
and plants about in the 120 gallon tank so that any existing territories are
broken up. Then introduced the seven other gouramis, and let them all settle in
at the same time. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Dwarf Gourami
12/21/08 Thank you. I'd forgotten to mention that was my plan, to
move things around. I also have a couple of slate caves I made that I'll be
putting in. I appreciate your feedback. I'll let you know how it turned out.
Have a great holiday. <Happy to help. Sounds like you know what you're doing.
Good luck, and Merry Christmas! Neale.>
Aggressive honey Gouramis
3/10/08
Dear Crew
Thanks for hosting a most informative site. My only regret is that I did not
discover it sooner. I am two weeks into cycling a new four-foot, 66-gallon tank
using two honey Gouramis (not sure if this was good advice, but it is too late
to change).
<Bad idea this. Colisa chuna (or currently, Trichogaster chuna) is one of the
more delicate members of the Gourami family.>
The tank is well planted and has a number of rock and driftwood hiding places.
My concern is that the Gouramis are engaged in what appears to be a major
territorial battle for a lushly planted corner of the tank. I think they are
both males, although I asked the shop assistant for a male and female.
<The sexes look alike outside of breeding condition; when breeding, males turn
rich honey yellow with a blue-black patch that runs from the lower half of the
head along the belly to the front of the anal fin. Females never change colour,
and are basically brownish pink with a dark band running along the midline of
the body. Do bear in mind that non-wild-type fish can be more difficult to sex.>
The fighting ranges from minor spats and chases, instigated by either fish, to
frightening wrestling matches near the top corner of the tank (the fish wrap
their bodies around each other in a strangling action). This leaves the one fish
completely exhausted while the other retreats to the other side of the tank
before coming in for another attack.
<I'd have thought in a 66 gallon tank this fish should come to some
accommodation sooner or later. Do ensure there are plenty of plants at the
*surface* of the tank, because this is what Gouramis are interested in.
Gouramis, as you know, breathe air; they also build bubble nests and lay their
eggs at the surface of the water. So for a Gourami, if all the plants are at the
bottom of the tank, it may as well be a desert for all the good it does them!
Floating plants are the ideal. Indian Fern (Ceratopteris) is cheap and easy to
grow, and heartily recommended.>
My questions:
1) Is it possible that a male and a female would behave in such a manner?
<Yes.>
2) Is the fighting likely to stop once one or the other proves his dominance?
<Hopefully.>
3) Would it help to introduce a number of females to the tank once it has
cycled, and, if so, how many?
<Adding twice as many females usually works well with most territorial fish. In
a 66 gallon tank this should work well.>
4) Any other suggestions?
<Remove one of the fish?>
4) After the tank has cycled, would the following combination be compatible:
-- 10-12 cardinal tetras (about three months after cycling complete),
<Fine; but double the number -- in a 66 gallon tank Cardinals will vanish. You
need a lot of them to have any "punch" in terms of aesthetics.>
-- dwarf Gouramis (if so, please advise on number and gender),
<Nope. Don't recommend these for a host of reasons. They're weak, VERY prone to
disease, and will likely fight with the Honey Gouramis.>
-- catfish (please advise on species and number),
<Any Corydoras of your choice would be ideal. I'd perhaps suggest something
tolerant of warm water conditions, like Corydoras panda or Corydoras sterbai.
Keep in groups of at least a dozen, and feel free to get a second school of
another species -- they mix wonderfully! If you want to try something a bit
different, then Asian glass catfish (Kryptopterus minor) is hard to fault.
Again, it's a schooling species and is reputed to die if kept in insufficient
numbers. But otherwise a lovely fish, and always on view.>
-- swordfish (if so, please advise on number and gender),
<Think carefully about Swordtails: they need hard, alkaline water, which is
precisely what the rest of your fish DON'T want. I'd recommend against them. For
this system, I'd suggest an Asian livebearer, the Celebes halfbeak (Nomorhamphus
liemi) instead. It is colourful and very active. Keep one male to at least two
females, and if you get multiple males, make sure you have at least three males
or they will fight constantly. The wrestling halfbeak Dermogenys pusilla is a
bit smaller but just as nice; keep in the same way.>
-- plus please suggest another species or two.
<I think a medium sized tetra or barb would fit in nicely here. A school of
Bleeding Heart Tetras would add pink to the aquarium, or Lemon Tetras would add
some yellow. A pair of dwarf cichlids would also work nicely. Laetacara
curviceps is one very nice species that behaves itself and has lots of
interesting colours depending on its mood. Chances are it will even breed in
your tank.>
Thanking you sincerely in advance
Clifford
<Good luck, Neale.>
Dwarf Gourami Issue, comp.
12/9/07
Hi Crew,
<Michael>
I check up on your site from time to time and I find it quite helpful.
<I as well>
I have 10 gallon tank. I conduct 25-30% water changes weekly. The ph is steady
at 6.5 and the temperature is 79. I currently have 1 male dwarf fire red Gourami
and two platys, a male and a female. I had a third platy that recently died
(possibly was killed). I am writing because my Gourami has been incredibly
aggressive and I am not sure what to do.
<Mmm, either remove it or try adding some more... Colisa lalia of whatever
"breed" females>
I initially had two of these gouramis. I was told they were a male and a female,
but they were indeed both male and they were attacking and chasing each other
constantly.
<Ah, yes>
I returned one of them to the store and, based on the research I did and based
on what I was told by the gentleman at the fish store, I thought this would
solve the problem.
<Mmmm, maybe not>
However, the remaining Gourami has now began chasing the platys instead. He, in
particular, began chasing my male sail fin platy. I removed the Gourami to my
spare tank for a couple of days to calm down. I returned him a couple of days
later and things seemed ok. I returned home one day to find him ramming the
lifeless body of the sail fin platy. It was pretty disturbing and I feel
terrible about it. I am almost convinced he killed the platy. [I cannot put him
back in the spare tank because I have five platy fry growing in there now - and
they are doing very well!]. He has now taken to chasing the two remaining
platys. The tanks is well planted and I provide plenty of food (flake, freeze
dried blood worms, and tetra colour granules). The Gourami particularly enjoys
the freeze dried bloodworms and the granules. This is my third fish tank and
while I have experienced slightly aggressive Gourami behaviour in the past, I
have never seen anything like this. It is a pretty fish, but I think I am left
with little choice but to return it. I am thinking of picking up a couple Cory
cats instead and making it a (peaceful) platy community. Any suggestions?
Thank you!
-Mike
<Again, your choices are clear... remove the bully or try calming him by adding
some females... If it were me, I'd likely trade this rogue in... Cheers, Bob
Fenner>
Re: Dwarf Gourami Issue
12/9/07
Thanks. I think I will remove the rogue.
Cheers,
Mike
<Real good Mike. Cheers, BobF>
Hey hey! Colisa reading 4/14/07
I have a question - I've been trying to do my research on dwarf Gourami
- so I need a straight answer because I keep getting all different kinds of
answers on these lil guys.
I have set up a 20 gallon tank, along with plants, flourite
<... Proper nouns are capitalized...>
bedding, the whole thing. I have been filtering it for DAYS now. We really want
dwarf gouramis and kuhli loaches - and have been doing plenty of internet
searching. So...are dwarf Gourami aggressive or not?
<Colisa lalia? Not much>
What is a better combination - 1 male and 2 females, 1 male and 1 female...
<At least one female per...>
I just want to be a good fishy parent haha. Is it a matter of luck??
<Is what?>
Please tell me.
Thanks guys!
-Dee
<Please read:
http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/dwfgcomp.htm
and the linked files above. Bob Fenner>
Re: hey hey! 4/14/07
Hey guys! I really appreciated the response. So, uh, besides the fact that
you would all appreciate scientific names, I guess, I just want to know what is
all the fuss about Colisa Lalias being "wife-beaters", or just plain nasty?
Thanks!
-Dee
<Just read. RMF>
Aggressive Gourami tank, Colisa lalia comp. 2/14/07
Hi everyone,
<Erin>
I absolutely love your site, and thank you for all the great
Gourami information! I'm a new tank owner with a 20 gallon that includes
5 Tiger Barbs and 2 Gourami (One Dwarf Red Flame, one Powder Blue,
both male).
<The same species, Colisa lalia>
I've been scouring your answers on solutions to aggression because my Red
Flame will not stop tormenting my Blue.
<Both males? This is natural behavior>
He chases him all day and head butts him but so far no visible fish
damage. I don't want to get rid of this beautiful fish, but I also want to
protect my Blue and had hoped to add a couple more Gourami (maybe
a Gold?). I wanted to add one or two more males,
<Uh, no>
but seem to be finding conflicting information. Would adding two more males
diffuse the aggression or make it worse?
<Likely worse>
Would I be better off adding maybe 3 females (I've been reading that a
higher female to male ratio may calm them)?,
<Yes, this is best>
or would that be a little too crowded for my tank?
<Should be fine>
I read your advice on sequestering the aggressive male in a floating tank,
which I plan to do, and adding floating plants...are these solutions better
bets for fixing the problem than adding more fish?
<Worth trying>
I also had hoped to eventually add a couple of non-Gouramis, but now I am
worried that my tank as a whole is getting too aggressive.
<Just the gouramis toward their own kind, sex...>
The Barbs leave the Gouramis alone, but will both aggressive species gang up
on a new species?
<Mmm, no... but the Tiger Barbs can become nippy...>
Can you recommend any other fish that might work well in this mix?
<Small danios, rasboras... many small catfish species...>
What type of algae eater would fare best in this tank?
<See WWM re>
Thank you so much, I'm sorry to add to your load of aggressive Gourami
questions!
Erin
<No worries. BobF>
War or peace in the tank? (10/11/03)
Hi everyone,
<Hi! Ananda here tonight...>
My wife just picked up a male Betta and was wondering if she could put him in
her 5 gal tank with her male ram & dwarf Gourami without any problems.
<Um, not likely at all. The Betta and Gourami are both Anabantoids, and are
very likely to go to pick on each other. Also, the tank is fully stocked with
just the ram and Gourami -- in fact, I'd rather see those two fish in their own,
bigger tank, at *least* 10 gallons. The 5 gallon tank would be great for the
Betta, either by himself or with a few ghost shrimp or algae shrimp (the latter
also called "Amano" shrimp) to help clean up the place. Besides,
shrimp are cool. :-) >
THANKS in advance - DS
<You're welcome. --Ananda>
Crowded aquarium?
Good morning,
<Good afternoon, Sabrina here>
I am writing about my six gallon Eclipse aquarium I have had up and running for
6 months. I initially cycled the tank with a flame dwarf Gourami, and
after the appropriate time added another blue dwarf Gourami and two very small
albino Cory cats. At the beginning, I noticed the flame dwarf ( which
was slightly larger than the blue) seemed to be the tank bully, which I chalked
up his being the first in the tank. Recently I have noticed the roles
have reversed and the blue is now larger, the flame having lost
weight. At the same time, I have observed the sizable growth of the
two Cory cats, who are now probably at least 1.5 inches
each. So my questions are these: first, it is necessary, as I suspect
based on the typical rules for fish keeping, to remove one or more of the fish
because of the size of the tank?
<I do not feel that two Gourami and two Corydoras is too much for your
system.>
second, should it be one of the dwarf gouramis because they seem to have such an
antagonistic relationship?
<I do believe that you should remove one of the Gourami, but not due to
crowding issues - this aggression will continue, probably worsen significantly,
over time. Chances are that you have two males, and tensions will
always be rather nasty between them. It could conceivably get bad
enough that one is continuously injured, or worse. Wishing you
well, -Sabrina>
Thanks, Matt
Gourami whiskers
I have 4 Gouramis in a 30 gal planted tank with 15-20 freshwater plants and
2 big rocks with hiding holes and a loach cave for my 2 clown loaches. Also 2
Danios, 2 tetras, a pleco to control algae and 2 rosy barbs. all are
getting along great and life is good except that I noticed that 2 of the
Gouramis 1 dwarf blue, and one honey, have had one of there whiskers
nipped. Not completely off, but just shortened a little bit... like
maybe a quarter of an inch from a 2 inch whisker. Has been several
weeks and it doesn’t show any signs of infection as far as I can tell. My
question is should this concern me as I haven’t seen any signs of other
aggression or infection, and will these whiskers grow back and if so how long
will it take to return to the size of the other whiskers. Thank you, Don Otey
<It’s hard to say what the culprit is here. It could easily be one of your
other fish (my first guess would be the Danios or one of the other Gouramis).
Unless it continues to get worse I wouldn’t worry about it too much, just
watch them to make sure they aren’t getting picked on. The whiskers should
grow back in time but it’s hard to say how long. Ronni>
Mixing Gouramis
<Ananda here today answering freshwater fish questions...>
I hope this isn't a stupid question, but I've surfed all over and still am
uncertain if mixing different breeds of Gourami is ok.
<I've seen a 29 gallon tank with three different species of Gouramis. One was
sufficiently nasty that he had to be put in the "penalty box" tank,
but otherwise they were okay together.>
I have a new pair of Sunset Fire Gouramis in a 28 gallon with a baby clown loach
(2 inches).
<Please get your clown loach a pair of buddies -- these are
schooling/shoaling fish and much happier in groups of three or more. And it's
very cute to watch them all pile up on top of each other to sleep at night.>
The tank is established (the prior tenants are now at home in a 60
gallon). I
know I have room for other fish, but want to make sure is don't upset these
cool fish. The store where I got these also has Power Blue and Gold
gourami's. Would introducing another pair or two create havoc?
<Well, perhaps temporarily, as the existing fish look at the new fish and say
"Hey, what are you doing here?" From there, it depends somewhat on the
individual fish. But I think you could add another pair or two of Gouramis. More
on Gouramis and there relatives at http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/anabantoids.htm
and the associated FAQs.>
Thanks!
Beverly Vance
<You're quite welcome. --Ananda>
Gouramis In A Group
Dear Anthony (just a wild guess here),
<Oops- Anthony's cheerful(?) colleague- Scott F. here>
My 30 gallon freshwater tank finished cycling almost 3 weeks ago. It
now houses 3 platys, 1 balloon molly, and one female Betta. pH is
7.8, temp is 79 F, ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate are 0. By choice I
have only artificial plants. I would like to add two male dwarf
Gouramis - are the Gouramis a good choice?
<Dwarf Gouramis are among the most peaceful of all fishes-great choice for a
mellow community aquarium.>
Will two males live together peacefully (I want two males because they are
prettier than the females and I'm not interested in having the Gouramis
reproduce)?
<Well, in my experience, it's better to keep these fishes in small groups,
like 2 females and 1 male, or 3 females and two males. Keeping two males
together seems to result in one harassing the other into submission, in my
experience. There also might be some occasional aggression between the Betta and
your Gouramis.>
I've read they like plants floating on the surface - I'd rather not have this
(even artificial ones). Will they be miserable without that?
<No- they should be fine. In nature (and in the aquarium), they often rely on
floating plants to provide an area for building their nests and depositing eggs.
They appreciate the cover, but it is certainly not necessary to have floating
plants for these fishes.>
Should I add some aquarium salt to the water? How
much? What brand?
<Personally, I'd skip the salt>
I thought I'd also get 2 or 3 Corydoras sterbai as scavengers - are
they suitable tankmates for this group?
<sure- these are great fish in their own right!>
I would not plan to get the new additions all at once.
<Good plan-build up your population slowly>
Thought I'd start with the Gouramis if you give me the go ahead. Any
thoughts would be appreciated.
<With the above caveats, I'd say that they would make great additions to your
tank! Good luck! Regards, Scott F>
Judy
Please help fast!!!!!!!! (overly aggressive Honey Dwarf Gourami?) <Might
be in reference to Colisa chuna>
hi I have a honey dwarf Gourami that I have had for about a year and a half.
I just moved it a couple days ago to a ten gallon tank a much larger one
than before. I put some tetras in the tank with him and he did nothing. he
began attacking the glass and I noticed that he could see himself. I went to
the pet store and they said I needed another Gourami in the tank.
<Whoa... what was the reason given for "needing another
Gourami"?>
I put
another Gourami even a little larger and now all it does is attack the larger
Gourami. I also have a Bala shark in there he is small however and my
Gourami attacks that one to. I don't know what to do. I want it to not be
lonely and stop attacking the walls but I cant put any other fish with it.
<Really... a Honey Dwarf Gourami, Trichogaster chuna? Please see here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/anabantoids.htm
I was also wondering if you could tell me how to tell the males from the
females. maybe I have two males.
<Perhaps... but if two or one they shouldn't cause much damage if this
species...>
I really need help please write me back as soon as you can so I can fix this
problem and all my fish can be happy.
thank you
my e-mail address is XXX
<I see it above in the address tray>
thanks
<Don't worry if the species is what you mention... the agonistic behavior
should/will settle down soon. Perhaps consider adding something in the way of
"dither-fish"... like small Danios, rasboras, the easier going barb
like cherry, checkerboard, gold... see the WetWebMedia.com site re these
choices.
Bob Fenner>
Adding after Upgrade
We've got a 20 gallon tank, newly established (converted from a 10 gallon tank) that has 4 black tetras, 2 tiger barbs, a golden algae eater, 2 hatchet fish, and we
just introduced 2 juvenile albino Corys. All of our fish are fairly small, the longest being the golden algae eater, about 2 inches. We recently saw some neon blue
dwarf gouramis at the pet store and thought they were very nice looking fish, but were concerned because our black tetras tend to get nippy when they see larger,
bright or shiny fish. The 2 barbs (contrary to standard tiger barb behavior) are pretty much completely oblivious to other fish except each other, and the hatchets
just hang around the top. Do you think the dwarf gouramis would have a problem in this setup or not?
Greg and Debbie
<Many tetras can be a little nippy but the Gouramis should be OK. Not sure how long since the upgrade, but wait at least a month before adding any more fish.
You should be testing to ensure you are cycled. If all is good then go ahead and add the gourami. Another pair of
Corys would be great. They like being in large
groups. Get all the same species. Don>
Gourami-Betta compatibility
Hi, I recently got a male Siamese fighter in a 2 foot tank and thought he
looked lonely in there, so I put in some more plants for hiding spots, and got
several dwarf Gourami and placed them in with him. So far they seem to be
getting along fine doing their own thing. I figured that if the Gourami were
going to show any aggression putting a 4 in they would hopefully take it out on
each other and not the Betta. I shall let you know how it progresses.
<Please do... sometimes Gouramis and male Bettas mix, sometimes they don't. Bob
Fenner>
Dwarf Gourami compatibility in a 10 gallon tank
I'm setting up my first tank (10 gallons) and I'm trying to pick out a group
of fish that will get along and be happy. Ideally, I'd like a Blue Dwarf Gourami, a couple of Sunset Fire Platys, a small school (5 or 6) neon
tetras, and an Oto or two for housekeeping. Obviously this will be a little on the high end of the inch/gallon rule but I'm prepared to make more
regular water changes. Will these fish all get along?
<Should, yes>
Will 10 gallons be enough for them not to feel crowded?
<Mmm, not much, no>
Also, will the Gourami become aggressive since it is by itself?
<Not likely... Colisa lalia can be picky, but mainly this happens with a mix of sexes/individuals of their own kind>
I made that mistake while cycling my tank with a single red eyed tetra who constantly nipped at the two smaller platys
that it shared the tank with. Thanks so much for the assistance.
<Thank you for writing, expressing your earnest concern. Bob Fenner>
Territoriality in small tank
Hi Bob and crew,
<David>
Four days ago I added a pair of Colisa dwarf gouramis to my 12g, well-planted tank, which is also home to a male
Betta and an SAE. Betta
doesn't even seem to notice the SAE, and was very tolerant of some rasboras I had in there before. However (as I might have expected had I
read your FAQs before buying the gouramis) the Betta is being quite
aggressive towards the gouramis.
<Happens>
For the first 2 days this was just occasional displaying behavior, but over the past couple of days, as the gouramis have started swimming
around more, Betta has been hounding them regularly. No outright fighting yet-- in fact, if the gourami is resting in the brush and
refuses to budge when the Betta approaches, the Betta will simply park himself very close and keep an eye on the gourami. If gourami is in
open water, Betta will display, flick his tail, give chase.
<I see>
So this is just intimidation so far, but I am concerned it will escalate, plus it is obviously stressful to all parties. Gouramis are
starting to peck at each other now too.
<Also typical behavior>
Before I return the gouramis, or (sigh) get another tank to isolate the Betta, I am wondering... if
Betta's behavior is likely to mellow over time, or to escalate?
<Good question... have seen both... But I am inclined to suggest you wait/see here... If the animals are not actually physically damaging each other... likely no real problem>
... if controlled overcrowding might help (prevent Betta from trying to establish territory)?
<Good question too... I would not do this... overcrowd that is... as too likely your Betta will retreat into oblivion... look to getting some small "ditherfish" though... Maybe some Endler's or Platies (livebearers) or small danios or my three fave tiny barbs (Oligolepsis, Golds, Cherries)... a trio of any of these ought to do the trick. Bob Fenner> Re: Territoriality in small tank
"Ditherfish"... I like that.
<Not original... don't know if anything I know is...>
You say that barring physical damage this aggression isn't overly harmful, but isn't this stressful, for the
Betta as well as his victims?
<Mmm, not really... stress up to a point is natural, desirable...>
One of the gouramis seems to have a mild case of HLLD-- probably came with it, though I didn't notice, but seems like stress isn't going to
help him heal... thoughts?
<Please read here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/hllefaqs.htm
and beyond... Bob Fenner>
Colisa on hunger strike 07/02/05
Hi crew,
<G'morning>
I have a pair of Colisa lalias in a 12g tank-- male and female-- along with
an SAE, a male Betta, and a trio of platies. For the past few days the
female Colisa has been hiding out in a corner and hasn't been coming up to
eat. I've been able to get her to eat by pushing some food down to her, so
I think that she is just being "shy". She tends to get chased around by
everyone else. This was a problem when I first got the pair, but she's been
doing fine for a few months now, and this has just been happening just in
the past few days. I did some replanting recently so perhaps this has
triggered the problem.
Tank chemistry is good...
What can I do to minimize the aggression towards the female Colisa?
<Get a larger tank, add more plants, decor for her to hide amongst>
The
male Colisa, SAE, and Betta all dump their aggression out on her. What
about getting a third Colisa-- I've heard that these do best in trios?
<Not likely to work>
If
that's the case would I want 2M+1F or 1M+2F? Or would it be better to try
adding another trio of dither fish?
<Perhaps this last will help... something fast like small danios, rasboras...>
On another topic, I've been interested in adding an A. agassizi, but I'm
getting conflicting advice on compatibility. I know they are territorial
with each other but not sure about compatibility with other dwarf cichlids
like Colisa and the Betta. What's your experience been with these?
Thanks,
-Dave
<Generally mixable in a system, with a grouping of species as you list. Like
warmer, softer water than your other livestock though. Bob Fenner>
Aggressive gourami 7/14/05
Hi Crew,
The troubles started last week with the addition of the new male robin
gourami
<Is Colisa lalia... RMF>
to our 40 gal tank. It housed 2 golden zebra loaches, 8 neon tetras,
and a female robin gourami for almost a year. Thinking that she needs some
companionship (her original partner has died a few month ago) we bought this
male robin. Initially, she started picking on him, chasing off food, and off
good spots, etc., which can be explained as she is almost two times bigger
than him. In two days the situation has changed, actually, it has not
changed much, but mirrored. Now it is our old gourami that is being chased,
she does not eat much, hides in the corners, and looks fairly depressed. To
add to the confusion, yesterday I noticed a strange behaviour from them,
which seems to me sexual in nature. They stay together side by side; the
female curls around the male and they stay for a minute or two, and then
slowly swim in different direction looking slightly disoriented. After this
the usual pecking continues. I am in a bit of a loss: whether I should bring
the male back to the fish store, as female would not survive under such
stress, or it is just the way their courtship is, or there is something I
can do to make it work?
Thank you,
Kostya.
<Mmm, you might try adding more plant or other hiding material, temporarily
sequestering one or the other in a floating breeding trap, specimen container...
even plastic colander... to see if they "calm down", otherwise I'd return the
newest one. Bob Fenner>
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