Species-Only Tank Guide: Why Keeping One Species Works

· emilynakatani · 14 min read
Species-Only Tank Guide: Why Keeping One Species Works

Table of Contents

Introduction

This species only tank guide makes the case for one of the most rewarding — and often overlooked — approaches in fishkeeping: dedicating an entire aquarium to a single species. While community tanks filled with diverse fish are the default for most hobbyists, there is a compelling argument for simplicity. A species-only tank lets you observe natural behaviours, simplify care and create a focused display that is both beautiful and deeply satisfying.

At Gensou Aquascaping, based at 5 Everton Park in Singapore, we have been designing and maintaining aquariums for over two decades. Many of our most successful setups — both for beginners and experienced keepers — are species-only tanks. This guide explains why they work so well and how to set one up properly.

What Is a Species-Only Tank?

A species-only tank (sometimes called a single-species tank or species-dedicated tank) contains just one type of fish or invertebrate. This might be a single individual — such as a betta — or a group of the same species, like a school of celestial pearl danios or a colony of cherry shrimp.

The concept is straightforward: by removing inter-species competition, aggression and dietary conflicts, you create an environment perfectly optimised for the inhabitants. Every element of the tank — water parameters, food, décor, flow rate — is tailored to suit that one species.

Species-Only vs Community Tanks

Factor Species-Only Tank Community Tank
Compatibility concerns None Significant — must research pairings
Water parameter optimisation Tailored to one species Compromise across multiple species
Feeding complexity Simple — one diet Multiple diets and feeding strategies
Natural behaviour display Excellent — fish act naturally Often suppressed by competition
Disease management Simpler — one species’ vulnerabilities Complex — different species react differently
Breeding potential High — no predation of fry Low — fry eaten by other species
Visual variety Lower — but more cohesive Higher — but can look chaotic

Advantages of Keeping One Species

Observe Natural Behaviour

In a community tank, many fish alter their behaviour due to the presence of other species. Shy fish hide more. Territorial fish spend energy defending space. Schooling fish may not school properly if they feel threatened. In a species-only tank, these inhibitions disappear. You see courtship displays, natural schooling patterns, territorial rituals and feeding behaviours as they would occur in the wild.

Simplified Water Chemistry

Different species thrive in different water parameters. Discus prefer warm, soft, acidic water. African cichlids need hard, alkaline conditions. In a community tank, you must find a compromise — often ideal for no one. A species-only tank allows you to dial in the exact pH, temperature, hardness and flow rate that your chosen species prefers.

Targeted Feeding

Feeding a community tank often means some fish get too much while others get too little. Bottom feeders may not receive food before mid-water species consume it all. Surface feeders miss sinking pellets. With one species, you choose one type of food, deliver it in one way and know that every fish is eating properly.

Easier Disease Treatment

When illness strikes a community tank, treatment is complicated by the fact that different species tolerate different medications differently. Some fish are sensitive to copper-based treatments; scaleless fish react badly to certain chemicals; shrimp and snails are killed by many common medications. In a species-only tank, you can treat confidently without worrying about collateral damage.

Breeding Success

For hobbyists interested in breeding, species-only tanks are nearly essential. Eggs and fry are far more likely to survive when there are no predators. Many species that are notoriously difficult to breed in community settings will reproduce readily in dedicated tanks.

Best Species for Single-Species Tanks

Some species are particularly well suited to species-only setups. Here are our top recommendations, with attention to species readily available in Singapore.

Species Group Size Min Tank Size Difficulty Why It Excels in a Species Tank
Betta splendens 1 male (or sorority of 5+ females) 15 litres (single) / 60 litres (sorority) Easy Full personality emerges when kept alone
Celestial Pearl Danio 10–15 40 litres Easy Males display vibrant colours and sparring behaviours
Cherry Shrimp (Neocaridina) 15–20+ 20 litres Easy Self-sustaining colony, fascinating breeding
Pea Puffer 3–5 40 litres Moderate Aggressive towards other species; personality-packed alone
Shell-Dwelling Cichlids (Lamprologus) 4–6 40 litres Moderate Complex territorial and breeding behaviour
Corydoras (any species) 8–12 60 litres Easy Delightful group behaviours, synchronised resting
Apistogramma 1 pair or 1 male + 2–3 females 60 litres Moderate Breeding behaviour is fascinating in a dedicated setup
Ember Tetra 15–20 40 litres Easy Large schools create mesmerising coordinated movement
Crystal Red Shrimp (Caridina) 15–20+ 20 litres Moderate Precise water needs best met in a dedicated tank

Bettas: The Classic Species Tank

A male betta in a dedicated planted tank is the most popular species-only setup in the hobby, and for good reason. Bettas are interactive, colourful and full of personality. Without tankmates to stress them, they explore freely, flare at their own reflection and often learn to recognise their keeper. In Singapore, the betta has deep cultural roots — wild bettas are native to Southeast Asia, and the domestic fancy betta remains enormously popular.

Shrimp: The Rewarding Colony

A cherry shrimp colony is endlessly entertaining. In a species-only tank, the shrimp breed freely, graze on biofilm and algae, and display fascinating social behaviours. Over time, you can selectively breed for deeper colour — turning a casual setup into a satisfying long-term project. Shrimp tanks are also extremely low maintenance.

Pea Puffers: Personality in Miniature

Pea puffers (Carinotetraodon travancoricus) are tiny freshwater pufferfish with outsized personalities. They are curious, intelligent and highly interactive — but also aggressive towards other species. A species-only tank is the only sensible way to keep them. They require live or frozen food (bloodworms, snails) rather than dry flakes, which adds a small extra commitment but is richly rewarded with their engaging behaviour.

Setting Up a Species-Only Tank

Research Your Species First

The entire setup should be designed around the needs of your chosen species. Before purchasing anything, research:

  • Preferred water parameters: pH, temperature, hardness, flow preference
  • Natural habitat: Does the species come from still water, fast-flowing streams, rocky environments or densely planted areas?
  • Social structure: Is it solitary, paired or a schooling species? How many individuals do you need?
  • Territorial needs: Does it need line-of-sight breaks, caves or open swimming space?
  • Substrate preference: Sand, gravel, bare bottom or leaf litter?

Water Parameters

Once you know your species’ preferences, set up the tank to match. For example:

Species Temperature pH Hardness (GH) Flow
Betta splendens 25–28°C 6.5–7.5 4–12 dGH Gentle
Cherry Shrimp 22–28°C 6.5–8.0 6–12 dGH Gentle
Celestial Pearl Danio 20–26°C 6.5–7.5 2–10 dGH Low to Moderate
Pea Puffer 24–28°C 7.0–8.0 5–15 dGH Low
Shell-Dwelling Cichlids 24–27°C 7.8–9.0 10–25 dGH Low to Moderate

Singapore tap water (pH ~7.0–7.5, moderate hardness) suits many of these species without modification — a significant convenience.

Aquascaping for Species-Only Tanks

The aquascape should serve the species, not the other way around. Here are approaches matched to specific fish.

Bettas: Densely Planted with Resting Spots

Bettas prefer calm water with plenty of plant cover. Use a combination of tall stem plants, floating plants for shade and broad-leafed plants (like Anubias) near the surface where they can rest. Avoid sharp decorations that could tear their fins.

Shrimp: Moss-Heavy with Hiding Spots

Shrimp thrive in tanks with abundant moss (Java Moss, Christmas Moss), driftwood with biofilm and fine-leaved plants where they can forage. The moss provides both food and shelter for newly born shrimplets, boosting colony survival rates.

Schooling Fish: Open Swimming Space with Peripheral Planting

For species like ember tetras or celestial pearl danios, leave the centre of the tank open for swimming while planting densely along the sides and back. This allows the school to move freely while having cover to retreat to when startled.

Shell Dwellers: Sand Substrate with Shells

Lamprologus shell-dwelling cichlids need a sandy substrate scattered with empty snail shells (escargot shells from cooking supply shops work perfectly). Keep planting minimal — these fish are about behaviour, not botanical beauty. Watching them claim, defend and rearrange their shells is captivating.

Pea Puffers: Complex Hardscape with Line-of-Sight Breaks

Pea puffers are territorial but small. Use rocks, driftwood and dense plants to create multiple territories within the tank. Each puffer should be able to find a spot where it cannot see the others, reducing aggression and stress.

Feeding and Care

Simplified Feeding

With one species, you need one type of food — perhaps two at most. This eliminates the juggling act of community feeding.

  • Bettas: High-quality betta pellets, supplemented with frozen bloodworms once or twice a week
  • Nano schooling fish: Micro pellets or crushed flakes; occasional frozen daphnia
  • Shrimp: Biofilm and algae (naturally occurring), supplemented with shrimp-specific food 2–3 times per week
  • Pea Puffers: Frozen bloodworms, live snails, frozen brine shrimp — they generally refuse dry food
  • Corydoras: Sinking pellets or wafers; frozen bloodworms as a treat

Water Changes

The standard recommendation applies: 20–30% weekly water change using dechlorinated water at a similar temperature. In a species-only tank, this is straightforward because you are maintaining one set of conditions rather than balancing multiple requirements.

Observation

One of the great pleasures of a species-only tank is the depth of observation it encourages. When you keep one species, you learn their individual personalities, recognise dominant and submissive individuals and notice subtle changes in behaviour that might indicate health issues. This attentiveness is both enjoyable and practical — early detection of problems leads to better outcomes.

Breeding Opportunities

Species-only tanks are the gateway to successful breeding. Without predators consuming eggs and fry, survival rates increase dramatically.

Easy-to-Breed Species

  • Cherry Shrimp: Will breed continuously in stable conditions with minimal intervention
  • Endler’s Livebearers: Give birth to live fry that are large enough to avoid most predation
  • Bristlenose Pleco: Males guard eggs in caves; fry are robust once hatched
  • Corydoras: Deposit adhesive eggs on glass and plants; fry are manageable with basic care

Moderate Challenge

  • Apistogramma: Cave-spawning cichlids with excellent parental care
  • Celestial Pearl Danio: Egg scatterers; provide moss for eggs to land in
  • Betta: Males build bubble nests and guard fry; requires separation of parents after spawning

Selective Breeding

For shrimp and bettas in particular, species-only tanks allow selective breeding for colour, pattern and fin type. Over generations, you can develop a unique strain — a deeply rewarding aspect of the hobby that is only possible with dedicated tanks.

Singapore-Specific Tips

Local Species Availability

Singapore has an excellent selection of freshwater species available through local fish shops. The Serangoon North area, Clementi and various neighbourhood shops stock most of the species mentioned in this guide. For rarer varieties — particularly high-grade shrimp or wild-type bettas — specialist breeders and online communities such as local Facebook groups and forums are valuable resources.

Temperature Management

Singapore’s constant warmth (25–32°C) is ideal for most tropical species without a heater. However, for species that prefer cooler conditions — such as celestial pearl danios, which come from highland environments in Myanmar — an air-conditioned room can actually be beneficial, keeping temperatures in the preferred 20–26°C range.

HDB-Friendly Setups

Species-only tanks are particularly well suited to HDB living. A 30–40 litre shrimp tank on a desk or a 60 cm betta tank on a console table takes up minimal space while providing maximum engagement. The focused nature of a species-only setup means less equipment, fewer supplies to store and a cleaner overall footprint.

Community and Support

Singapore has active communities for betta enthusiasts, shrimp keepers and cichlid fans. Joining species-specific groups connects you with experienced local keepers who can advise on breeding, feeding and sourcing quality stock. The hobby becomes social as well as personal.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

1. Wrong Group Size

Schooling and shoaling species need minimum numbers to feel secure. Keeping three neon tetras in a species tank defeats the purpose — you need at least 10–12 to see natural schooling behaviour. Research the minimum group size for your chosen species and stick to it.

2. Ignoring Social Structure

Some species have specific social requirements. Apistogramma do best as a harem (one male with multiple females). Shell dwellers need enough shells for each individual to claim one. Bettas — male bettas — must be kept singly (one per tank, always). Misunderstanding social dynamics leads to aggression and stress.

3. Overstocking Because “They Are All the Same Species”

Having one species does not mean you can cram in unlimited numbers. Bioload still applies. Territorial species still need personal space. Stock conservatively — the fish will be healthier, the water cleaner and the display more attractive.

4. Neglecting Aquascaping

A bare tank with nothing but fish and a filter misses the point. The aquascape is part of the species’ environment — it provides shelter, territory, foraging surfaces and visual complexity. Even a simple setup with a few plants and a piece of driftwood makes a dramatic difference to both fish welfare and your viewing pleasure.

5. Choosing a Species on Impulse

A species-only tank is a commitment to understanding and catering to one species in depth. Choosing based on a momentary attraction at the fish shop — without researching care requirements, adult size or temperament — leads to disappointment. Spend time researching before you buy.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a species-only tank boring compared to a community tank?

Not at all. In fact, many experienced fishkeepers find species-only tanks more engaging. When you keep one species, you notice details you would miss in a busy community — individual personalities, subtle colour changes, courtship behaviours and social hierarchies. The experience is deeper rather than broader. A school of 15 ember tetras moving in unison through a planted tank is arguably more visually striking than a random assortment of unrelated fish.

Can I add snails or shrimp to a species-only fish tank?

Purists would say no, but practically, adding a few nerite snails for algae control or a handful of shrimp as a cleanup crew is widely accepted and does not fundamentally change the dynamic. The exception is pea puffers — they will eat snails and shrimp. Use your judgement: if the addition serves a functional purpose and does not alter the fish’s behaviour, it is a reasonable compromise.

How do I prevent inbreeding in a self-sustaining colony?

For shrimp and livebearers that breed readily, genetic diversity can become a concern over many generations. The solution is simple: periodically introduce a few new individuals from an unrelated source. In Singapore, this is easy — swap a few shrimp with a fellow hobbyist or purchase from a different shop every six to twelve months. This keeps the gene pool healthy.

What is the best species-only tank for a complete beginner?

A cherry shrimp tank in a 20–30 litre planted setup is our top recommendation for beginners. Shrimp are forgiving, fascinating and nearly self-sustaining once the colony is established. They produce very little bioload, breed without intervention and their grazing behaviour keeps the tank clean. A betta tank is the close second — equally easy, with the added reward of an interactive, personality-rich fish.

Related Reading

Conclusion

A species-only tank is not a compromise — it is a deliberate, rewarding choice. By dedicating your aquarium to a single species, you gain deeper observation, simpler care, better breeding outcomes and a more cohesive visual display. It is fishkeeping refined to its most intentional form.

Whether you are drawn to the flowing elegance of a betta, the busy charm of a shrimp colony or the coordinated beauty of a nano fish school, a species-only approach lets you experience your chosen species at its best.

At Gensou Aquascaping, we have over 20 years of experience helping fishkeepers in Singapore design setups that match their interests and lifestyle. A species-only tank is one of our favourite recommendations — simple, beautiful and endlessly engaging.

Want to start your species-only journey? Get in touch with our team, explore our range of tanks and supplies, or learn about our custom aquarium design service for a setup tailored to your favourite species.

emilynakatani

Still Have Questions About Your Tank?

Drop by Gensou Aquascaping — most walk-in questions get answered in under 10 minutes by someone who has set up hundreds of tanks.

5 Everton Park #01-34B, Singapore 080005 · Open daily 11am – 8pm

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