English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

is there any possible tank mate for dwarf puffers if they have room?

2006-12-23 14:58:03 · 7 answers · asked by ziddyziddy 3 in Pets Fish

7 answers

Ottos are the only fish that work with dwarf puffers. Most everybody who tries them have success. Dwarf puffers for whatever reason just ignore them. If you want dwarf puffer information the best site there is is dwarf puffers.com

2006-12-23 15:11:13 · answer #1 · answered by fish guy 5 · 0 0

Another puffer is the best for these kind of guys; however this article below says that sometimes ghost or cherry shrimp will do fine with them.

You might also want to try adding some baby snails in the tank. Puffers LOVE eating snails and make a satisfying crunching noise when they get them. However snails can take over a tank if not careful, so be warned.

The first exception is the popular Dwarf Puffer (Carinotetraodon travancoricus). This Puffer stays small, only reaching 1-1.5 inches. One thing that makes these Puffers unique is that it is easy to determine their gender once they have sexually matured. The males stay smaller and develop a dark brown vertical stripe on their stomachs. Females are usually larger and lack the stripe. If the proper tank is provided (that is, one that supplies at least 2-3 gallons per Puffer), is heavily decorated and has more hideouts than there are Puffers, then keeping 2 or 3 females to one male often works well. In fact, under these circumstances and with proper diet, Dwarf Puffers will often spawn. Dwarf puffers have been kept successfully with Otocinclus algae eaters. There has also been limited success in keeping Dwarf Puffers with different species of shrimps, such as Amano, Cherry or Ghost shrimp. There is always a risk with shrimp that some Dwarf Puffers will decide that they are food and will eat them.

2006-12-23 15:22:48 · answer #2 · answered by GoddessofCoughSyrup 4 · 0 0

the DPs like to nip at sluggish shifting fish. they are no longer the rampant killers that those people look to think of they are. I somewhat have a woman and male pair that have bred until now... however the rasboras ate lots of the fry. i first have been given them for my 2.5 planted tank. i had them in there with a male and femal guppy. they did fantastic however the male chased the female (puffers this is) somewhat initially. i then moved them to my 25 gallon "small fish" community with neons, glass cats, cories, gold barbs, otos and chain loaches. the only issues that have been given picked on have been the otos and cories. even then it became in basic terms little fin nipping. DPs are countless the cleanest fish i've got ever seen! my different fish will spit out some foodstuff, however the DPs in basic terms take finished bloodworms without fuss. i've got additionally in no way seen a dookie putting off my puffers until now, ever, as I somewhat have with the different fish i've got ever owned (must be far extra than 80 species and 500 specimens) they now stay in a 10 gallon with a 2'' striped raph catfish, and four harlequin rasboras. the rasboras are bigger Aholes than the DPs, i'm somewhat thinking approximately removing them and getting some extra neons/cardinals. in a 6.5 you will desire to do the two or yet definatle no longer the two, the DP will nip the betta unmercifully. DP's flow throught the great tank a minimum of five circumstances on an universal basis. and no puffers are not labyrinth fishes.

2016-12-11 15:08:30 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Not much. You can keep dwarf suckermouth catfish (aka otocinclus "algae eaters") along with them. Other bottom-dwelling catfish may be OK also. But puffers have two problems: (a) They are real fin-nippers, and (b) they are small even when puffed out, so you can't keep bigger fish in with them. So basically, anything that doesn't eat them first will get its fins nipped off.

2006-12-23 15:03:36 · answer #4 · answered by CO_Hiker 3 · 2 0

Not really. They're very small, and they prefer brackish water, which not many species do well in. All the successful dwarf puffer tanks I have seen are just puffers, nothing else.

2006-12-23 15:24:23 · answer #5 · answered by Dreamer 7 · 0 3

yes get a female/male

2006-12-23 15:15:06 · answer #6 · answered by wood explorer 2 · 0 2

no

2006-12-23 15:05:01 · answer #7 · answered by embia13 2 · 0 2

fedest.com, questions and answers