No. They require different water conditions and most African cichlids are far too aggressive. Discus are best kept alone or with peaceful South American fish like tetras and rams.
Ryan
hi guys
do u think discus can live with African cichlid in the same tank? i wanna put a few african cichlid into my 44 gallons tank. are african cichlid aggressive?
your opinion are welcome and appreciated.
rgds
Ken
No. They require different water conditions and most African cichlids are far too aggressive. Discus are best kept alone or with peaceful South American fish like tetras and rams.
Ryan
Ryan is correct, of course.
But I've put West African Jewels in a tank with Discus and Angels. The Discus beat the crap out of the Jewels!!!! Until one day, the Jewels decided to raise a family. At that point the tables turned and the Discus were running for their lives. I'd like to try it again one day with a group of all female or all male Jewels.
Mama Bear
No, unless you want to kill your Discus. Africans are very aggressive, and have vastly different water requirements.Originally Posted by CoKen
Connie
I have tanks of both Africans and Discus ~ they are correct ~ very aggressive! I have Rams with my Discus too and all is well ...except once the Rams spawned and they turned into Africans real quick!!
Discus are so mellow and beautiful ~ Africans IMO .....at least mine are lil piranahs!
Marie ~
I wouldn't IME I couldn't even keep a placo with my cichlids because they killed it.
Tiffany
Agreed my chilids are so aggresive if i was to put any "new" fish in from my lps they would kill the fish in less than a week "I seen it Happen". However, In my discuss tank i am keeping 4 wild caught angels as an experiment 3 months and a bit in all is well the discuss and the angels are actually liking each other....i also have two catfish who patrol the bottom for me and they seem to be very happy as well. But as for Africans with Discuss no chance,....my bad for telling everyone my life story.
I have a 125 planted community tank with 12 Discus and 2 yellow Lab cichlids, 2 fire red gouramies, 1 dwarf gourami, 2 powder blue gouramis, 2 white tetra, 14 Neon tetra, 6 Blue Ram, 5 fancy guppies, 5 Ottos, 1 bn placo. 2 zebra loaches, 1 Angelicus Botia
I have had no problems with any of these fish together for 6 months. The only thing fighting are the occasional Discus males around the females. The colors on all the fish are wonderful! Health of the fish is very good. I change 40% of the water 2X's weekly. The Discus and the Labs swim by each other and never have seen a hint of aggresion. It is the most beautiful tank I have ever had.
Filtration
planted tank
30 gal planted refugium under the 125 that the water flows from the top tank to the refugium under.
fluvol 404
Aquion 75 HOB
regular water changes.
Wild Wally
why dont u go for dwarf south american cichlids instead?
these are compatible with discus and are not as agressive
Until the SA cichlids start breeding. I have a pair of rainbow cichlids I raised since they were babies. They are the most chill SA cichlids. 5-6 months into their young lives they decided to spawn, eat their young, and spawn again every 2-3 weeks. Normally their fry provide delicious nutrition for the cardinal tetras, but they become so aggressive in parenthood (even towards much larger fish) that keeping them with discus is very sketchy, unless you have bad *** discus...
I agree! Rift Lake cichlids need a different type of water than discus and are agressive. Some species of the West African cichlids work, I have a West African butterfly cichlid with my discus and he doesnt bother my other fish.
Interesting stuff here. I've never kept African Cichlids with discus, but I can't help but think there may be a few varieties that can be compatibly kept with discus.
It can work, is it optimal? definitely not, but as people are able to keep and grow discus in hard tap water, naturally one can throw in a few rift lake cichlids in there as long as they are healthy.
Now AGGRESSION is one thing that varies between fish and there's no guarantee a rift lake mbuna cichlid won't tear up a discus or even the other way around. Though typically peacocks and labs are usually more docile so they can work more often than not. Considering what we tend to feed discus though, I would be worried about bloating the african cichlids as most are omnivores/herbivores save for haps.