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Introduction and Protomelas Question

412 views 4 replies 3 participants last post by  mokujin22  
#1 ·
Hello and thanks for running and contributing to such a great forum. This is very educational and has been a great source of information.

After a long hiatus, I am returning to freshwater aquaria. I have had a horrible time keeping saltwater tanks stable and I have fallen in love with planted tanks.

One of the things that made me switchover to saltwater was the color of the fish. For that reason I have been very attracted to protomelas. The colors are amazing and in my limited experience the most colorful I have seen. I have two tanks that I am starting. One is a 65 gallon tank that is currently saltwater (until I sell the live rock and critters on Craigslist) and a 225 gallon plywood tank that I am building and will be ready for fish mid-February. I would like one to be a protomelas tank (with possibly some other Lake Malawi species) and the other a planted tank. I am leaning toward making the 65 gallon the proto tank because I have an arowana that need (or will need) the extra room). I am also interested in finding out what plants I can put in the protomelas tank.

Wow.. that was a mouthful and a lot of information. I throw it out their and I welcome your comments and suggestions.
 
#3 ·
65 gallon is 3 foot wide which was a concern of mine also. I have a 55 gallon that is four foot and I can easily make a 5 or 6 ft plywood tank when the need arrives.

My focus is more on color and aggression. More interested in more color and less aggression. A bonus would be a genus or species that does not tear up plants. O love big tanks that I can safely heavily stock and have as many different colors and patterns represented without them eating each other. Protomelas was an easy choice based on my local selection and my limited research. I am looking in the right direction if that is my goal in a fish?
 
#4 ·
You are going to really need to get/ or make a 6ft tank for this project. If you heavily stock the plants, with the right species, you are likely to do fine with most Haps/Peacocks. You'll want to go beyond just Protomelas, but that is a good start. I'd suggest an all male tank.

The 55 gallon, or the 3ft 65 won't suffice.

I'd suggest that you get the tank details down, before worrying about which fish to keep.
 
#5 ·
Protomelas is my favorite genus of Malawi cichlid. In the last few years, I've bred 7 different species/variants and have two more groups currently that haven't spawned yet.

That being said, their tank space requirements vary wildly with genus. Something like a breeding group (quad) of super red empress or steveni Taiwan Reef can be fine in a 55/75 whereas a spilonotus sp. will need a 180 as adults.

If you don't think that you'll be able to upgrade from a 65 for some time, I'd go with a smaller hap - perhaps an Otopharynx sp. or a smaller Copadichromis. Both genus have some beautiful species and some stay around 5". Peacocks are another option.

If you think that you'll be able to upgrade this year, go ahead and get some juvie Protomelas. With adequate filtration, 2" growout fish will be fine in the 36"x18" tank up until they hit about 4"-5" and start getting snarky.

In terms of plants, the only plant I keep with my Africans is anubias. Most others will get nibbled upon or uprooted.

EDIT: This advice is largely based on keeping breeding groups. I reread your initial post and if you're looking for color, follow Fogel's advice and go all male.