red devil, frontosa, green terror, bichur, dragon goby(my fav), fire eel, freshwater moray eel, etc.. check aquabid.com for exotic fish
2007-01-18 18:26:48
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answer #1
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answered by dustmaster69 2
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Heavens, you haven't got room for another fish in there.
I don't know what type of eel you have, but all the other fish will outgrow a 55 gallon tank.
Oscars needs 60 gallons at least per fish, so 125 gallons would be minimum for your 2 oscars.
Ghost knife fish need 100 gallons all to themselves, and they are best kept in dedicated (species-only) tanks.
Worry first about getting the right tanks for your current fish, then look into getting something else.
Exotic fish tend to be "exotic" for a reason - they are not always easy to keep. Be sure to thoroughly do your research before buying any fish.
2007-01-19 01:37:20
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answer #2
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answered by Zoe 6
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No no no. this does not paintings in spite of how sturdy your filter out is or how customary your water ameliorations are. A crimson tailed shark desires a 30 gallon tank and gets as much as 5" long and is fairly territorial. The tiger barbs choose a minimum of a 29 gallon to be chuffed because of the fact they're an fairly energetic swimmer and choose area, a 10 gallon won't be able to furnish the gap they choose, especially because of the fact they get to be as much as 3" long and fairly giant, even in spite of the undeniable fact that maximum ppl purchase them while they're tiny, they get good sized. additionally tiger barbs additionally choose a college of 5+, and continuously shop them in peculiar huge variety faculties, so as that they don't pair up and p.c.. on others. innovations for this tank..... A heater a million Male betta 3 ghost shrimp or 6 Dwarf Harlequin Rasboras 3 ghost shrimp or 6 Dwarf Rasboras 4 Pygmy Corydora catfish or 6 Cherry Barbs 3 Ghost Shrimp Plantssss!
2016-10-07 09:23:12
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Me thinks you will already have great problems with your tank when those fish grow, why kill a nice exotic fish? Perhaps you can replace those plain Oscars with something Exotic - losing them will open lots of space, considering a 55 gallon isn't even enough for two Oscars alone.
Arrowana's grow to over 3 feet long - how entirely irresponsible of everyone to suggest it.
2007-01-19 00:04:37
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answer #4
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answered by Ghapy 7
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how big are your Oscars? If they are small you are fine right now but after a few months you will have problems for 1 adult size Oscar it needs 55 gallons by itself you have two and alot more fish not good!
2007-01-19 00:39:18
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answer #5
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answered by C live 5
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Try a silver dollar ray. It is a fresh water ray, that gets to be around 8 to 12 inches. If you have oscars though, they probably will attack it, unless you get one that is larger than they are.
They run $60 and up depending on the size you get.
2007-01-18 16:00:19
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answer #6
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answered by James 2
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Arawana. All of these species are going to overgrow the tank anyway, so why not go with something big!
2007-01-18 15:58:35
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answer #7
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answered by dbmack13 2
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buddy..YOU HAVE TOO MANY fish in that little tank.
2007-01-19 02:28:26
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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i would suggest Arowanas, gars, bichirs, siamese tigers, etc.
2007-01-18 20:56:58
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answer #9
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answered by steve s 3
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arowana. they get big. and they really look good
2007-01-18 23:52:53
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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