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sorry to put you down but even freshwater has its inaccurate assumptions
Not a problem. We're all here to learn.
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1)Go for African Cichlids with plants- false
My LFS DOES have African tanks with plants. Like I said they might replace them on a regular basis.
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2)They breed really easily - not all do
I've only kept some of the Malawi ones, but they've all reproduced for me.
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3)Your skimmer should work in this environment (though not as well) - it doesThey require a high 4)pH but not necessary - not all (west african dwarfs)
I was referring to the rift lake species. I tend to forget that the others exist.
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5)Everything purchased will be captive bred/grown. - wilds are in the hobby too
This is the opposite of what I've been told by breeders and my LFS (usually I don't believe what a LFS says but in this case it agrees with me so it must be right
)
<blockquote><font size="1" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">quote:</font><hr>6)You can keep your DSB (if you have one) and reap the same benefits for nitrate reduction as well as buffering capability. - i wouldnt try this(no detritus feeders and not the same bacteria also africans like to roam in the sand making big pits rendering it useless)
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This is not true. I am using a DSB with left over sand from my reef. At first they moved it around, but it's been pretty stable for a year now. I won't say its level. In fact there's a huge mountain in the middle of the tank with the bare glass showing on part of the sides. Bubbles do form and get released into the water column. As to clean up I have a REALLY oversized filter for the tank. The sand looks great. I'll post a picture this weekend. I want to get some reef shots up anyway.
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7)There is always a demand at LFSs so you can sell the babies back - only because people by them and put them in too dense of populations in too small of a tank and have to comeback for replacements
Whether it's true or not all the books/online articles talk about how dense the wild populations are and tote this as a plus when keeping them, however, they do always talk about the amount of filtration needed to do this both mechanical and chemical.
-Greg
[ December 07, 2001: Message edited by: GDawson ]</p>