Monday, December 12, 2011

My 200 l Cold water fish tank / 200 l Kaltwasseraquarium [4/8]






TAKE A LOOK AT MY OTHER VIDEOS www.fischbottich.de Overview of Marcels 200Liters Freshwatertank, with european freshwater fish. eg: pumpkinseed, Gudgeon, Goldfish and Rudds +++ The population of this 200 liter (53 gallon) tank: Pumpkinseed sunfish / Sonnenbarsche [Lepomis gibbosus] Stone loach / Bachschmerlen [Barbatula barbatula] Rudd / Rotfedern [Scardinius erythrophthalmus] Goldfish / Goldfisch [Carassius auratus auratus] Amur bitterling / Bitterlinge [Rhodeus amarus] Prussian Carp / Giebel [Carassius gibelio] Tench / Schleie [Tinca tinca]

17 comments:

  1. just tap the glass with ur finger, they will shock and the poop will gently fall down. endless fun :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. I have a cold water tank with goldfish, a chinese algae eater, tiger barbs, and guppies. All of which coexist very well(as long as you have more than 5 barbs) and the barbs are semi tropical so they do fine in colder temperatures

    ReplyDelete
  3. ive had soo sooo many tropical fish and really i mean anything from arrowanna to freshwater eel and im done with tropical for now so i only have on oscar now i wanna start a cold water fish tank any suggestion on cool fish that can co-habit ur tanks are amazing and havent seen cold like this

    ReplyDelete
  4. lol it prob takes a pretty long time to clean it :P

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thank you very much!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Yes, all of my goldfish had that long poo. It looks weird.

    ReplyDelete
  7. That goldfish has a really long poop hanging from his rear.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Ein größeres Becken ist selbstverständlich immer besser. Ich halte allerdings auch nur kleine (Jung)Fische, teilweise habe ich sie seit dem Larvenstadium. Wenn sie zu groß für das Becken geworden sind, kommen sie bei mir in den Teich. Die Goldfische und Barsche in dem Video sind zB.
    schon gar nicht mehr im Aquarium. Anders lässt sich das auch nicht regeln, da die meisten der Fische schnell wachsen und auch zu groß werden.

    ReplyDelete
  9. ich hab gelesen die brauchen ein 300l becken aber ich glaub du weist es besser;)

    ReplyDelete
  10. Right. Bluegill, I've read, are more aggressive. Pumpkinseeds tend to be on the friendly side.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Yes, they've been much more friendly then I thought. They ate invertebrates like (little) snails, but they've never been hunting or killing other fish, except two very small juvenile gudgeons and one sick stone loach. Apart from this, they've never been a danger for my other fish (also smaller ones).

    ReplyDelete
  12. Wow, I am amazed the sunfish of that size hasn't eaten everything else. I had a young sunfish (bluegill I think) that was only about 1.5 inch long and ate all the small stuff in my tank (fish, crabs, shrimp). I'll never do that again. Yours seems much more friendly than mine did though.

    ReplyDelete
  13. I'm looking forward to see a video of it.

    ReplyDelete
  14. It's a pumpkinseed sunfish (at least, there are three of them). They do eat other fish (small ones) and invertebrates, but they also eat flakes, tabletts and sticks like all other fish. So it is not very difficult or dangerous to keep them in a fish tank. Compared to e.g. a redfin perch (who can be a real killer), pumpkinseeds are very soft.

    ReplyDelete
  15. at 00:52 is that a carnivore fish I hope its not

    ReplyDelete