I got a new camera! Here is my shell dweller tank. I still have no clue which kind of shellies these are so if you know I’d love to hear!

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I got a new camera! Here is my shell dweller tank. I still have no clue which kind of shellies these are so if you know I’d love to hear!
Some pictures from the 75 and the 10 this morning! Verral and the silver dollars were not all too cooperative for photos... Also, has anyone seen spotted silver dollars with fins like these? They're black and red with a hook, absolutelt gorgeous, wish I could get a better photo (my phone doesn't deal with duckweed-screened light well, and they have a strange fear of phones) Can't find pictures of any though online.
African shell-dwelling cichlids?
Hate it | Not my type | it’s ok | Good | Great! | One of my Favorites! | I LOVE IT!!
i learned about these guys after watching the king of DIY’s video on them and i fell in love omg. they’re so cute and interesting! I would love to have a long shallow tank full of these guys like Joey does. honestly: dream fish. i just wish they weren’t so difficult to get around here ;~;
Shell Dwellers - Page 1
Well, here it goes! We're back to Vault 101 for an adventure. I'm really pumped for this chapter, especially the latter pages! (This cover is a WIP, I'd like to get a head start with the actual pages before settling on anything.)
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The plants in this tank are getting tall !
Quick question for anyone who may know!
I'll be moving in a few months, and was planning on putting my 4 multi shell dwellers in a 30 gal, and have my dwarf gourami probabky stay with them since he stays in the upper water column (he'd have a good area with some anubias and otger cover, too). However, I was just able to measure the tank this weekend and found it to be a 20 long instead of a 30.
Should Pancake be okay to stick with the multis? Or should he stay in his own 10 gal and they get the 20 long all to themselves?
@aquariadise @aquasplendens @jayce-space @aquatictimes
Shell dwellers!!!
My lfs has some N. multifasciatus, and just placed 3 on hold! They're going to stay with Pancake in the 10 for now (will add some sand and shells, of course!), Then have they're own tank when I move to VA this winter.
I'm sooooo excited for these guys!
Really quick I want to cover some grounds on something
I’ve noticed there isn’t a lot of disclosure on shell dwellers in small tanks
Like yeah it’s totally possible to keep Neolamprologus multifasciatus, N. similis, N. brevis, or sometimes even N. ocellatus and relatives in a 10 gallon tank, the space is there, but the issue is the volume
just because you can do it doesn’t mean it’s easy, and I see a lot of people aspiring to keep them, and as much as I’d love to see more people get into cichlids, I don’t want people to get started on the wrong foot, these fish cannot be taken lightly and are terrible beginner cichlids, despite the fact they don’t demand a lot of space.
lake tanganyikan cichlids are very delicate and sensitive to shifts in water perimeters, since the lake is so huge, it self insulates and the temperature barely shifts even a degree year round, they are not evolved to handle changes in water perimeters.
the issue with this is, it is very hard to keep water perimeters steady in smaller tanks, things like pH, hardness, and especially temperature can shift during water changes or even for no real reason at all
since these guys need the pH above 8.0 and the nitrates below 20 to thrive, while also being bad candidates for planted tanks, water changes need to be frequent and they need to be precise, fucking up can easily lead to the death of the fish. If the pH drops too quickly or rapidly since your tap isn’t at what they want while the tank water is up there, the very least you’re going to expect is a lot of stress and flashing among the fish as they try to readjust to the perimeters.
These fish die when exposed to nitrites and ammonia, and they die quickly. If overfeeding takes place or your bacterial colony is weak and you get a spike, you could lose fish in the course of a few hours of being exposed to even a small amount of ammonia, especially since ammonia is more toxic to fish in the high pH they should be kept in.
Another thing to cover is breeding, and if you keep especially N. multifasciatus, the most popular choice, it’s inevitable that if you take care of them properly, you’re going to have babies. A lot of babies. Shell dwellers are a pain in the ass to catch since they get into the shells so tightly, and multi’s can spawn as much as twice a month, with fry growing relatively rapidly. Parents sometimes don’t even finish raising one batch of fry before throwing out another generation. You need to know what you’re going to do with all of them and the best methods of removing all the young.
When keeping shell dwellers, you need to make sure in a smaller tank like a 10 you only get 1 male as well. Two males will constantly be at each other’s throats with the lack of territory provided. While they don’t claim huge zones of territories, they still take about a square foot of it, and there are not two square feet to be had in a 10 gallon aquarium. Especially if keeping an ocellatus or ocellatus relative, you’ll quickly end up with a dominant male killing the other male, or even all the other ocellatus in the tank, regardless of their sex. They’re a much more aggressive type of shell dweller and despite their social nature, they can be relentless to one another in small quarters. While I’ve seen it done, it’s not easy to set up.
Don’t get me wrong, shell dwellers are some of my favorite cichlids and they are a joy to keep, they’ve got excellent personalities and show fascinating behaviors. But I would not, in my wildest dreams, keep them in anything short of a 20 or 29 gallon just from what I’ve experienced with them. Not only do they show better mannerisms when kept in a colony rather than in a pair or a trio, but the extra water volume helps disperse possible mistakes or oops’s that you might have while keeping them.