fish tank fish that get along

[The Barbs are considered semi-agressive and should generally not be kept with peaceful community fish. I did’n’t even realize the Barbs had been added to the glofish list.]The Danios and Tetras are nonagressive community fish and can be kept with other peaceful nonagressive community fish, too many to list here really but, keep in mind that for the glo to be seen you’ll have a certain light and other fish kept in the same tank may not show up as well. I would limit the tank to all glofish for the best viewing appeal. Other’s will just get lost so to speak. Unless you have a tank with regular lighting in which case it won’t matter, but then again the glofish won’t glow either.PS Tetras can be a bit nippy with each other, they just have a lot of energy and don’t really do any damage. Mollies are also rather large and can produce a lot of waste; they are not schooling fish so you could have a few in a 10 gallon, maybe 4 and a small school of dwarf corycats. Plecos are too large for a 10 gallon and loaches really need a school and a 10 gallon would also be too small for them as well, unless that’s all you had or you find the dwarf loach that most fish stores in my area at least don’t stock.
A school is also a minimum of 6 usually, although you could potentially get away with a school of 5 if they are more shoaling fish than schooling.Your best bet is to do research and that way when you’ve done enough research yourself, you’ll better be able to determine if advice you see online is actually accurate. I would say IMHO most any other community fish you may find at your local Petco or aquarium shop.I have several dozen of their non glowing relatives (6 Danios, 9 Tiger Barbs, 9 Neon Tetras, 10 Black Skirted Tetras, Non Relatives -6 Corys, 1 Red Tailed Shark and 4 Algae Eaters) all living peacefully in a 55 gallon planted tank. Each group mostly sticks to it’s own area of the tank and leaves the others alone…though there is some mixing/chasing from time to time.Based on their size at the time of addition they would naturally fall within the pecking orders established by the resident group of fish fairly soon after addition to the tank.Thanks for the A2A. Best Answer:  The following are compatible with GloFish, though some of them will grow out of a 10 gallon: Betta (Siamese Fighting), Black Neon Tetra, Black Skirt Tetra, Bleeding Heart Tetra, Blind Cave Tetra, Bloodfin, Bosemani Rainbow, Buenos Aires Tetra, Cherry Barb, Chinese Algae Eater, Clown Loach, Colombian Tetra, Congo Tetra, Corydoras Catfish, Croaking Gourami, Diamond Tetra, Dwarf Gourami, Dwarf Neon Rainbow
, Emperor Tetra, Fancy Goldfish, Featherfin Squeaker, Flame Tetra, Flying Fox, Gardneri Killifish, Head-and-Tail-Light Tetra, Kissing Gourami, Kribensis, Kuhli Loach, Lemon Tetra, Molly, Otto Catfish, Pearl Gourami, Penguin Tetra, Platy, Pleco (Common), Pristella Tetra, Rainbow Shark, Red Base Tetra, Red Eye Tetra, Red Tailed Shark, Rosy Barb, Rummynose Tetra, Serpae Tetra, Siamese Algae Eater, Silver Dollar, Silver Tip Tetra, Sparkling Gourami, Swordtail8 years agoThis is not mine but from Yahoo! Answers. That completely depends on which kind of glo fish. Barbs are somewhat aggressive, as are danios. Tetras are very passive.Mollies are good fish to mix with these species as they're bigger. Get more mollies than glo fish and you should be ok.(Figure appx 1 fish per gallon of water. And you should have one algae eater in a ten gallon tank: either a plecostamus or loach...But plecostamus turn into monsters, so beware).All glo fish are schooling fish, as are mollies, meaning they do better as a group.
A good mix would be a school of danios and barbs (say, 4 of each) in a ten gallon tank. Or, six tetras and four mollies. Or four mollies, and two barbs and two danios. Or four tetras and either three danios or three barbs. I hope this makes logical sense.Home : Solution Center : Aquarium Fish for Kids or Beginnersfish tank fish breeding Aquarium Fish for Kids or Beginnersbuy coral for aquariumWhy doesn't Angie's List rate attorneys?fish tank toilet for saleLandscaping: What do your neighbors do that drives you crazy?buy used septic tankHow much does it cost to be a member here?buy fish tank online with fish
How much does it typically cost to paint a 2100 square foot house on the exterior? That's very difficult to answer without seeing the house. As one poster said, the prep is the most important part. On newer homes that don't have a lot of peeling paint, the prep can be very minimal even as low as a couple or a few hundred dollars for the prep labor. fish tank pump diaphragmOn a 100 year old home with 12 coats of peeling paint on it, then the prep costs can be very high and can easily exceed 50% of the job's labor cost.A 2100 sq ft two story home could easily cost $1000 just for the labor to prep for the paint job. That number could climb too. Throw in lots of caullking  or window glazing, and you could be talking a couple or a few hundred dollars more for labor. Painting that home with one coat of paint and a different color on the trim could run roughly $1000 or more just for labor. Add a second coat  and that could cost close to another $1000 for labor.
For paint, you may need 20 gallons of paint. You can pay from $30-$70 for a gallon of good quality exterior paint. The manufacturer of the paint should be specified in any painting contract. Otherwise, the contractor could bid at a Sherwin-Williams $60 per gallon paint and then paint the house with $35 Valspar and pocket the difference. $25 dollars per gallon times 20 gallons? That's a pretty penny too. That was the long answer to your question. The short answer is $2000 to $4000 and up, depending upon the amount of prep, the number of coats, the amount of trim, and the paint used.I recently read a reference about our systems on an aquaponics gardening forum and the author of the post inaccurately implied that we were misrepresenting how much fish we can raise in our multi-tank systems. This post demonstrated a total lack of understanding of staggered stocking and multi-tank systems. Given that the person writing the post runs the forum, and can delete posts that are in conflict with hers, I don’t have a means of replying directly to that group. 
But, it made me realize that the concept of staggered stocking is a great topic for this Q and A column. The reason all (except for our smallest hobby system) of our Clear Flow Aquaponic Systems® use multiple fish tanks is so that a grower can use staggered stocking to increase fish production and, therefore, increase the nutrient load to grown more plants.  In staggered stocking, you have multiple fish tanks and stock them sequentially.  The fish are stocked at a given size, typically 50 grams and then grow to maturity in that same tank, along with those same fish that are growing at the same rate. Let me give you an example. We will assume you are raising tilapia in our Family Plus system, which has 4 100-gallon fish tanks, along with the proper filter tanks for converting fish waste to nutrients and raft tanks for plant growth.  First, let’s look at the growth rate of tilapia.  With proper feed rates, quality feed and good water quality, it takes 24-26 weeks to raise a tilapia from 50 grams to about 600 grams (1.5 lbs.), which is the size most growers harvest at.
When starting your system, you initially stock one tank with about 38 – 50 gram fingerlings.  Then, 6 weeks later, you stock the second tank with the same number of 50 gram fingerlings.  And, every 6 weeks, you repeat this in the remaining tanks.  After 24-26 weeks from the date you stocked your first tank, and every 6 weeks after that, you will have a tank full of fish ready to harvest.  When you harvest a tank, then you restock it with 38 – 50 gram fingerlings. This means that in each fish tank in the system, you will raise 2 full crops of fish, one every 24-26 weeks.  So, if you harvest 38 1.5 lb fish (57.5 lbs) from each tank twice a year, you will annually harvest 460 lbs. from the Family Plus system.  The real beauty of this staggered stocking is that you never have more than one tank ready for harvest and, with sequentially smaller fish in each tank, you are never over the system capacity and have a steady supply of nutrients for the plants. The density of the fish in the tank ready for harvest is 1/2 lb of fish per gallon of water. 
But, if you look at the total water volume of our systems, you are actually raising fish at a density of one twelfth lb of fish per gallon of water.  This is a much safer ratio than any other method of stocking that I know of. And, there are other benefits which include better nutrition and less stress for the fish. With staggered stocking you can get the right feed to the fish at each stage of growth.  With a mixed size population in one fish tank, it is impossible to make sure the fish are eating the right sized pellet and getting the right nutrition for the stage of growth they are at. When you have a tank of fish ready for harvest, you can net those fish out of that tank.  If you have a mixed size population in one tank, you stress all of the fish when you are trying to net just the big ones. So, all in all, when you compare using 4 – 100 gallon fish tanks  to using 1 – 400 gallon fish tank, you can easily see the value of the four tank system.  When you apply this to our larger systems that use 6 fish tanks, your output is every 4 weeks.