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Thread: All Male Guppy Tank???
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01-11-2013, 03:31 AM #1
All Male Guppy Tank???
Hey, I currently have a 300 Litre Cichlid tank and I love my cichlids but sometimes they just seem like a lot of work but I do want another fish tank, but something 'easier'.
I was thinking of maybe a 2 footer and I want a community tank and I was thinking of a bunch of male guppies for the centre piece or maybe a school of neon tetra's as I have always loved those little guys.
I love guppies, but not my tanks being infested with them! So I remembered that I saw somewhere while I was searching the web one day something about an all male guppy tank. Is it possible? Without any females there I guess they would have nothing to fight about but would they all get along together?
I am still undecided on the size tank but I know I don't want something to big and I think I would like a school as a centre piece.
I think as background fish I would have a few corys and a couple of balloon mollys too.
I just want to get some idea's from people, I want something that will be a great combination but fish that are 'easy' to care for.
I just miss having a tank of fish that I don't have to worry about expensive fish being eaten or attacking one another and finally have some beautiful plants again!
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01-11-2013, 07:28 AM #2
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01-11-2013, 12:45 PM #3
You can do all males, but not loads of them. I currently have four in my tank, and they do well. The trick is EVEN numbers. Never have an odd number of male guppies in a tank. They tend to form teams of two, anyone singled out will be the odd man on the playground.
2 10 gallon tanks, 1 20 gallon tank, 1 Fluval Edge, 1 29 gallon tank, and one backyard pond.
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01-11-2013, 05:05 PM #4
A lot of people go all male with guppies mostly because of there brighter colors.
If your tank is not planted to heavy you won't have a problem with overpopulation as the parents will eat the fry with no remorse if you go the mixed route. You just have to keep a ratio of one male to two females so the females do not get pestered to much.
Males will still pester each other.Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection we can catch excellence.
Once you learn to quit, it becomes a habit. -Vince Lombardi
“Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are.” ― John Wooden
SHE......Lest We Forget
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01-11-2013, 05:44 PM #5
I agree with Tiari about the #'s - the males tend to stick together in pairs - they are very cute to watch. There are many types of fancy tail guppies to make a colorful tank.
46 gal fw tank with black skirt tetras, neon tetras, spotted cory catfish, cherry barbs, guppies, snails & 4 amano shrimp - plastic & live plants
5 gal QT with green corys & 2 guppies
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01-11-2013, 07:57 PM #6
What about a 29gal standard tank and you can absolutely do guppys and any other live bearer for that matter. I would recommend as a centerpiece a red sword male group of 4 maybe? They are active, get decent size and go GREAT with the bright green plants.
FW: 1 45gal, 1 40gal, 3 10gal, 3 30gal all community tanks of different species
Sw: 1 55gal, 1 30gal show, 1 29gal show, 1 20gal and 2 10's
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01-12-2013, 12:16 AM #7
Member
CoryCat
- Join Date
- Sep 2011
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I had an all male guppy 5 gallon tank as I kept removing the males from a 10 gallon mixed tank. For several months this tank was quite overstocked with up to 15 or more at times - not recommending this overstocking - but just sharing my experience that my males did fine together as far as their behavior. No fighting at all from my particular group. Experiences of others may differ.
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01-12-2013, 02:08 AM #8
Originally Posted by Dennis Bissett
I really am fond of this idea. Would Cherry Barbs work their way in there some how as well?
Also with school sizes, could I get a longer but thinner tank?
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01-12-2013, 12:12 PM #9
+2 for your first idea - guppies can be spectacular and neons, or cardinals are lovely in schools. Guppies are far more tolerant of water with nitrates unlike neons or cardinals so mixing these isn't easy unless you do large water changes and/or add an intank algae scrubber to lower nitrates and thus allowing for smaller water changes. A thin tank is fine - it is volume of water and how low the nitrates remain that matter: this does depend on tank size, filtration, and water changes (volume and number.)
Last edited by Cermet; 01-12-2013 at 12:20 PM.
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A 75 gal with eight Discus, fake plants, and a lot of wood also with sand substrate. Clean up crew is fifteen Sterba's Corys. Filters: canister w/UV, in-tank algae scrubber that removes phosphates and nitrates! Also, a highly dangerous commercial nitrate removal unit from hell
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01-14-2013, 08:21 AM #10
Not sure if barbs would work with that, as placid as cherries are, need someone with more experience to jump in there. As far as numbers go, it comes down to swimming room and what your filtration can handle. Start with low numbers, gradually increase your schools while testing parameters, if you can comfortably maintain 0 ammonia, 0 nitrates and only have 10-20 ppm nitrites a week after a water change, its coping





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