Halfpikant
New member
Hey everyone,
I was in the LFS with my dad today, to check out different possibilities for our first tank.
An employee managed to convince my dad that you can put a fish in the tank given it can swim fast enough.
Since he is paying 50% of all costs I do not see the point arguing about this with him.
This brings me to my question: wich type of fish is most suited to put in the mantis' tank? Preferably a hardy one that is suited for beginners.
In the other LFS store in our city we found a small mantis shrimp. Can someone identify it for me based on the picture below? It is about 3-3,5 inches long. Based on my experience (wich consists of looking at pictures on roy's list) I think it's an O. scyllarus but I'm not sure. I'm a bit concerned about the white spots on it's back but that may be sand.
It was active and interactive and busy chasing a purple chromis in the same tank, but during the minutes I was watching it i never heard it smash something.
I read on this forum it would be lucky to find a peacock this size, but i'm concerned this guy won't last until summer (when i have time to start a tank). He didn't even have a PCP pipe in his aquarium, but he might have buried that in all the sand.
Is there a way to figure out if he is healthy?
I was in the LFS with my dad today, to check out different possibilities for our first tank.
An employee managed to convince my dad that you can put a fish in the tank given it can swim fast enough.
Since he is paying 50% of all costs I do not see the point arguing about this with him.
This brings me to my question: wich type of fish is most suited to put in the mantis' tank? Preferably a hardy one that is suited for beginners.
In the other LFS store in our city we found a small mantis shrimp. Can someone identify it for me based on the picture below? It is about 3-3,5 inches long. Based on my experience (wich consists of looking at pictures on roy's list) I think it's an O. scyllarus but I'm not sure. I'm a bit concerned about the white spots on it's back but that may be sand.
It was active and interactive and busy chasing a purple chromis in the same tank, but during the minutes I was watching it i never heard it smash something.
I read on this forum it would be lucky to find a peacock this size, but i'm concerned this guy won't last until summer (when i have time to start a tank). He didn't even have a PCP pipe in his aquarium, but he might have buried that in all the sand.
Is there a way to figure out if he is healthy?