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Best Schooling Fish for Planted Tanks

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417K views 245 replies 185 participants last post by  lennaquino  
#1 ·
What do you think is the best schooling fish, that is an absolute must in any planted aquarium?!
 
#3 ·
I don't know about an absolute must for a planted aquarium, but there are plenty of schooling species I am particularly fond of:

Cardinal Tetras (P. axelrodi): the classic and most used schooling fish for planted aquaria. Not exactly tight schoolers, but they are very social fish that group together very tightly when they perceive a threat. They look spectacular in schools of twelve or more. Relatively hardy. They live about 2-3 years on average when well kept.

Rummynose Tetras (H. rhodostomus): probably the second most used schooling fish for planted aquaria (the fish I like most other people seem to like, too...). Excellent, tight schoolers with more subdued colors than the cardinal tetras. The brightness of their red noses is indicative of the water quality of the aquarium. There is also another species (P. georgiae) which grows slightly larger, but the nose is never as bright. A sensitive species --acclimate to your aquarium slowly.

Green Neon (P. simulans): lively, tiny little fish with a cool, green-blue neon stripe and less intense red on the belly than the cardinal tetra. Does not grow nearly as large as the cardinal (about half the size). Very social. Great for small planted tanks.

Red Phantom Tetra (M. sweglesi): not really a schooling fish, but still a very social tetra which tends to form loose groups. Their more ovate body shape and deep red color contrasts excellently with the more slender shape of the cardinal tetra. Not nearly as nippy as the serpae tetra.

Tube-mouthed Pencilfish (N. eques): another fish that forms loose groups. Very dainty, small species of delicate appearance. Not exactly very colorful but the unusual way in which they swim (at a 45 degree angle with the head pointing up) is very cool.

Silver Hatchetfish, Marbled Hatchetfish (G. sternicla and C. strigata): I have always loved hatchetfish! Unfortunately, since both of my current aquariums have openings in the back, I have been unable to keep any for a very long time. They will jump out of the tank given the slightest chance. The silver hatchetfish schools particularly well, in my experience.

Those are my favorites. I love most of the fish I've kept, really. Each seems to have its proper place.

Carlos
 
#4 ·
Mollies

I know they don't school in the traditional sense, but Sailfin mollies generally group themselves together rather informally at various locations in the tank. Fifty mature male Sailfin mollies in a 75 gal, or 75 in a 125 gal aquarium sure look nice together. Plus they are free for the taking down here.

I guess there's a lot of fish that can be locally caught that school nicely. I once had some pretty red shiners that schooled nicely.

I guess the classic schooling fishes for an aquascaped tank are tetras, like the Neons, Cardinals, Rummy Nose, or Scissor tails.

Steve Pituch
 
#167 ·
Re: Mollies

I know they don't school in the traditional sense, but Sailfin mollies generally group themselves together rather informally at various locations in the tank. Fifty mature male Sailfin mollies in a 75 gal, or 75 in a 125 gal aquarium sure look nice together. Plus they are free for the taking down here.

I guess there's a lot of fish that can be locally caught that school nicely. I once had some pretty red shiners that schooled nicely.

I guess the classic schooling fishes for an aquascaped tank are tetras, like the Neons, Cardinals, Rummy Nose, or Scissor tails.

Steve Pituch
I agree with you on the mollies. I recently started keeping livebearers for the first time. My LFS sells feeder livebearers 5 for $1. I bought 20 and wound up with a mix of platies, mollies, swordtails. They've been breeding very well in my 125, and I now have hundreds of fry. Now I just need to get some tetras to keep the population down.
 
#7 ·
My favs would be...

Rummy nose Tetras, they constantly stay in a group swimming back and forth.

Black Neon Tetras, school almost as much as the Rummy Nose

Harlequin Rasboras, they're just so pretty.

White Cloud Mountain Minnows, also very pretty.

And for a species tank because they are a bit nippy, Serpae Tetras. Once they settle in they get a beautiful smokey pink in color.

And if you put at least 6 cory cats in a tank they will almost never leave the side of their buddies.

Cheers, CD
 
#8 ·
Best schooling fish

The best schooling fish I ever worked with are the following.
1. Rummynose Tetras - Barnone the best.
2. True SAE - amazing long lines.
3. Cardinal Tetras - I use this a lot.
4. Glowlight Tetras - Nice orange w/ white tips
5. Rasbora Hengeli
6. Veiltail Angels
 
#151 · (Edited)
Re: Best schooling fish

The best schooling fish I ever worked with are the following.
1. Rummynose Tetras - Barnone the best.
2. True SAE - amazing long lines.
3. Cardinal Tetras - I use this a lot.
4. Glowlight Tetras - Nice orange w/ white tips
5. Rasbora Hengeli
6. Veiltail Angels
I went to purchase Rummy Nose Tetras for the first time yesterday based on this thread, and there was only 4 left. The LFS was closing and the clerk was in a hurry, and so I quickly pointed out some nicely schooling glowing orange fish, and so they sold me 10 "Rasbora engeli" so called.

Pretty sure they are Rasbora Hengeli (Trigonostigma hengeli.), and they school VERY nicely:


A lot of the threads and web sites say these are rare. How rare are they? Should I breed them?
 
#9 ·
schooling fish

I know they are not your traditional schooling fish, but a group of Dwarf neon rainbows are beautiful in a planted aquarium :) Neon tetras are another of my favorites...

What do you think of Diamond tetras or Congo tetras? Under the right light these guys are beautiful!!!

Shannon
 
#11 ·
I'm partial to darker colored small less active schooling fish for my tanks. Harlequin Rasboras are #1 with Cherry Barbs a close 2nd. I'm getting a school of H. maculatus soon so I may have a new #1.

Best,
Phil
 
#13 ·
1. rummynose tetra are the BEST group fishes. they stay as group all the time. for my observation, they are not as strong as harlequin rasboras.

2. harlequin rasboras are another nice group fishes. they are very easy to keep. when i put a group of 16 in my tank, they couldnt stop eating flakes after 15 mins.

3. pencil fish are group fishes. my favorite is banded pencil fish (Nannostomus espei). they are the only pencil fishes with spots.

4. pygme cory are group fishes. they are very cute!!!

i just saw some ember tetra in LFS. they used to be little bit expensive. the price is ok now. their transparent bodies look cool.
 
#16 ·
molahs4 said:
Does anyone have any experience with Broken Line Tetras (Hemigrammus ulreyi)?

http://www.characin.com/species/characin/tetras/hemigrammus-ulreyi.htm
I got some in the local auction last fall. Funny, they were really brave in the bare Q tank, I though they had a lot of spunk. But when I moved them to the planted 10 g tank they got spooked. Now they hide a lot. No other fish in that tank, maybe that is their problem.
 
#17 ·
Pigheaddd said:
i just saw some ember tetra in LFS. they used to be little bit expensive. the price is ok now. their transparent bodies look cool.
I have these! They are so pretty, in a planted tank they color up just like a new penny. Newly minted copper. That plain transparent shrimp-grey color changes when you start feeding them dried bloodworms and brine shrimp.

When they were with the zebra danios, they never schooled. Now the danios are gone and there are rams and A. borelli in the tank and 4 cories and they school very tightly.

That may change in a few days, all that changed recently.
 
#19 ·
Cherry barbs!

If you have a half filled tank Half beaks are awesome fish, they are surface dwellers and they are pretty fun to watch, they are not common but if you can get some you will surely enjoy them.

Killies, they have he most awesome colors, it is said they are the most beautiful tropical fish.
http://www.killies.com/images/IndexRACBP.jpg

Cories, I think hey are the most close schooling fish i've ever seen if you get a group of 6 they stick together all the time, and they are so easy to keep and also there are many kinds
http://www.fishprofiles.com/profiles/fw/profile.asp?id=Corydoras+agassizii

YoYo Loach, This is a personal favorite, it just glows in highly light tanks and i just think they are awesome then they are near any plant!
http://www.fishprofiles.com/profiles/fw/profile.asp?id=Botia+lohachata Get many of these!!!
 
#22 ·
What's with all the tetras...? :D

There's a lot of cyprinids that school well and will put even the great cardinal tetra to shame.

Barbus rhomboocellatus is a superb schooling fish that hasn't bothered any plants since I got them. They definitely possess a subtle color, but the edges of their scales are outlined in neon green. And they school very, very well. Their pattern too is very unique--at first it reminded me of the pattern on a ball python.

Microrasbora kubotai (M. sp. 'Somchai') is another awesome species with an excellent eye-catching yellow color. Here's a pic:
Image


Sundadanio axelrodi comes in a few colors, all of which display the same iridescence as the cardinal tetra. Here is a picture of the green form:
Image


Danio choprai is another one that schools very well and has very pleasing yet somewhat subdued colors.

Others that work really well:
Rasbora dorsiocellata
Danio shanensis
Barbus jae
Microrasbora erythromicron

They're all great, but I think the best school for a planted tank is by far Corydoras pygmaeus. :D
 
#24 ·
I have 5 debawi cats that line up like they are in the blue angels. One on top of another in a current flowing away maybe a 1/4 of an inch apart. They are mostly nocturnal, so they just flow in the current together during the day, but at night they like to skim the surface as quick as they can be (and they are quick). Probably the tighest school I have.

Matt
 
#26 ·
I've found lately that my group of about 9 Mosquito Rasboras (Boraras brigittae) seem to school pretty well when my Croaking Gourami is on the prowl and "hunts" them.

He finally learned he can't eat them, though, but they still bunch up nicely whenever he's around. So far no problems w/them at all, but he's still getting moved and replaced with a pair/trio of smaller gouramis ;)

Cute fish, very small, I like 'em :D

Image