Hi All!
I'm new around here, and buzzing around about some toads I want, but I thought I'd share this fish tank I've been working on.
I'm involved with wild type species preservation for assorted varieties of wild type betta (I breed them and plan to give away one sibling pair free to someone who also wants to breed them at least once a year when I've got things going better). Well, I also LOVE livebearing fish, and I came across these beauties on an auction site not long ago. I just had to have some. They are Jenynsia Onca, a new species to the hobby, with very little information available on them. I'm hoping to breed them and observe them, compile research, and publish it at least on my own sale website if not in an e-mag or similar.
I splurged and bought a 15 gallon Clear for Life tank, azoo plant substrate, and used some driftwood I've been collecting. There's a manzanita burl in the tank, along with a root piece of some wood or other, probably oak or manzanita given the locations in which I collect.
Bill knows this already, but for the rest of you: I'm huge on planted tanks. Why? I hate water changes LOL. Also I live in a small apartment and some of my tanks are crammed in weird places where you can see them, but they're a pain to get to. This one, for instance, is in my kitchen. Behind my island, under a window. Given how much I love NPTs, and given I had a great experience with an appropriately planted 10 gallon natural light tank before, I went with natural light only for this one.
I'm also a huge fan of biotope tanks. I truly feel that the best way to keep fish is in a home environment that mimics their natural one. So I did a bunch of research, found about three scraps of information on how to set up a Rio Uruguay biotope tank, and for the rest, I'm kind of flying by the seat of my pants lol.
The tank isn't finished yet. I'm going to add oak leaf litter this week, and I have more plants coming in to keep the water clean for me. I'm also hoping to add a catfish species that is found very commonly in and around the Rio Uruguay.
Anyway, here's the fun part: PICTURES!
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