First Axolotl Tank Setup: let me know what you think!

ldunniva

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Hello, I'm new to caudata.org. My name is Lydia and I'm a Zoology student living in Ohio who is hopefully going to be purchasing her first axolotls soon. I've been keeping fish, reptiles and various other exotics for 5+ years now, and decided to finally branch over to amphibians, after years of being obsessed with axolotls.

I recently acquired a mature tank (29 US gallons or about 110L) from a friend and altered it in order to create what I *hope* will be a fantastic axolotl tank. I want to eventually switch over more to live plants. After doing research on axolotls, here's what I've come up with:

I'm using a very fine argonite sand substrate that is holding my water at slightly alkaline and hard levels, which I was told axolotls prefer over acidic/soft water. The sand grains average 1mm I believe.

I have multiple terra cotta hides (no sharp edges, all sanded down) in the tank, as well as a heavy assortment of soft plastic (I used the same rule of thumb as I use for bettas and rubbed over them with pantyhose to make sure they wouldn't snag) and silk plants. I also have a piece of driftwood in the tank, and I have taken a wood file to all sharp/protruding pieces to soften them.

The tank is currently running with two Aqueon QuietFlow 30 filters. I'm only running both since I stuffed them with media from my other aquariums in order to help seed the tank, as most of the bacteria was lost in moving/re-setting it up. When the tank is stocked, I'll just run one as I know axolotls are sensitive to water flow. I have sponges cut and ready to pop on over the intake hoses in order to slow down the flow and prevent fragile gills from getting sucked into them.

The tank is staying nice and cool without the use of a chiller currently, but I may have to add one in the summer. I also have a full hood on top of the tank to prevent jumpers.

Currently, the tank is empty and will remain so until the tank is cycled again (fishless cycle), and I'm positive that it's a safe, appropriate habitat for an axolotl. I would ideally like to have a pair (not necessarily M/F, just two axolotls in general) in this tank.

What are your thoughts? Is there anything you see that's a red flag? Things I could change/improve on?

This is my first time posting on this site, so I apologize if I mess up with attaching the image of my tank or anything like that.
 

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It seems you have done your research and have everything in order :). Very nice setup for now and I look forward to seeing updates when you have more live plants. The only thing I can see is to make sure those stones in there. They are most likely big enough but sometimes it is difficult to tell size from pictures. Just to be sure though, make sure they are bigger than the axolotl's head to be sure they won't get them stuck in their mouth.
 
Hey Lydia, welcome to the forum. Cool tank :) My only suggestion would be maybe to try some live plants? I have vallisnera, anubias and java ferns in my tank and my 5 axies seem to really love them.
 
Thanks for the suggestion! I definitely want to do live plants, the only issue is that it's winter in my area and very cold/snowy out so getting my hands on good aquatic plant stock is going to be a bit harder until spring rolls around.

That being said, I did add what few plants I could find to the tank and removed some of the plastic ones to compensate. So far I have 3 moss balls, and two varying swords. I've got another big sword I'm picking up tomorrow, and am keeping my eyes peeled for anubias (nana is my favorite) next.
 
Skudo, no worries! Those rocks are big heavy river rocks, like the size of my palm/fist, there's no way any axolotl could get their mouth around them.

I added the largest ones I had and only have them in there to protect plant roots and prevent the axolotls from uprooting them or the fake plants in the future. The tank has no gravel or anything that is able to be swallowed in it, thankfully!

I was looking around the forum to see other setups and I think I'm going to get a small dish to put in the tank for sinking foods. I know small grain sands are a safe substrate as axolotls can easily pass them, but I still don't want mine inhaling mouthfuls of sand every day.
 
I forgot to add this but here's an updated photo of the tank with some of the new plants.

I gt stuck with a few platies so I guess they're going to be hanging out in this tank until I can find a good home for them.

For scale, this tank is approx. 30in/76cm long, and 12.5in/32cm wide, and 19in/48cm tall.
 

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Hey Lydia, welcome to the forum. Cool tank :) My only suggestion would be maybe to try some live plants? I have vallisnera, anubias and java ferns in my tank and my 5 axies seem to really love them.

How do you keep vals alive with low light? (They are the spiral tall ones yes?)
 
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