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What could live in a 20 gallon long that is semi aquatic ?
Quote:
Originally Posted by MootWorm
Everything I've read on PDF says they're fine in a paludarium. They're not really semi aquatic, but they do sometime sit in shallow puddles of water. The biggest threat is that they'll fall into the water and drown. But if you have properly sloped sides and plenty of footholds, and the water's not too deep, they should be able to get back onto land safely. But PDF are pretty sure footed, and I haven't come across any instances in which they've fallen into the water.
If you're looking for an animal that uses both water and land portions, you're very limited in your options. Best bet would be a few fish plus a terrestrial animal on the land side.
That could work what are my options for that
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Fire belly toads & newts are a good choice for a 20 gallon.
There are semi-aquatic lizards that do well in a terrerium with land and water such as caiman lizards, basiliks, and sailfin dragons, but they need larger enclosures and more for advanced keepers.
I would suggest a turtle, but they would outgrow a 20 gallon.
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There are thousands upon thousands of options, design schemes, and materials you can use. I'd check out the dendroboard forum, they have a ton of DIY and step by step builds for paludariums. It'd take hours to write up all the steps here. But basically you'll need to build the terrarium, incorporate a filter and possibly a heater if required, plant/scape it, culture feeders and/or cleaning crews, test and retest everything to make sure it's leakproof and functioning properly. Plus you'll have to cycle your water to make it suitable for fish.
If it were me, I'd go darts. It's been years since I've kept them, bur they're wonderful. For fish, you'll definitely want smaller species as you have a limited amount of space. My all time favorites are endlers. I'd get a small colony of males, they're bright, playful and very hard to kill lol. And if you want to breed them, they're livebearers and pop out babies prolifically. I've got an endler tank going right now, I can't recommend them enough.
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Re: What could live in a 20 gallon long that is semi aquatic ?
Here's a pic of male and female endler. The girl is the ugly one lol. Sorry for the crap pics, they're ridiculously fast.
http://img.tapatalk.com/d/13/10/01/gyzevydy.jpg
Don't mind the dying plants :)
Here's a lyretail, I believe it's a hybrid
http://img.tapatalk.com/d/13/10/01/yhu4aqys.jpg
The males only get about 1" long. Perfect for smaller tanks
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I know it's been said before but fire belly toads would my first option they use land and water are great eaters and are super cool looking mine were amazing just wash your hands after holding them there really toxic my eyes would burn like hell if i did not wash up after handling them. I guess fire belly newts would work but when i had them they were fully aquatic except for perhaps once i saw them out of the water. Among others leopard frogs and bull frogs might work a 20 gal is way to small for a bull frog works for leopards though at least for mine it did. I don't think pacman frogs would work well now i have never kept them but they seem to loaf in the dirt all day the ones i said all are at least kinda active if only sitting in plain sight. Hope i helped and again fire belly toads are your best bet.
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What could live in a 20 gallon long that is semi aquatic ?
Would newts and toads be ok together ?
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Never had a newt, but I think it's unwise to mix amphibians. Some (most?) of them have toxins that can kill each other. Also, you've got to consider the size of your tank. 10 gallons, especially when most of it will be taken up by your land feature, hiding your equipment, etc, is not a whole lot of space. You'll probably end up with 5 gallons of water, tops.
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Re: What could live in a 20 gallon long that is semi aquatic ?
I personally think the only time you can mix species is if they occur naturally together or have overlapped territories in the wild. Other than that, I'm not a fan of cohabiting multiple species together either.
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What you could do is house a single male dwarf African bullfrog (Pyxicephalus edulis) in a setup like that. Pyxies are good swimmers and IMHO they're awesome animals.
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Gentlemen and or ladies. I give you my 20g fire belly toad vivarium. I spent more time with growing a pothos, amazon sword, and tall tropic grass than it did to build the tank. I also made the water feature. About 2 months of work went into it before i even considered putting frogs in it.
Currently in the process of setting up a 55g vivarium for frog breeding...
Theres 5 fire bellys in there
http://i1301.photobucket.com/albums/...ps973fa367.jpg
http://i1301.photobucket.com/albums/...psdc2ab49e.jpg
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