Algae Eater Fish for Aquarium Guide: Species Compared

· emilynakatani · 4 min read
Algae Eater Fish for Aquarium Guide: Species Compared

Plenty of hobbyists walk into a shop asking for “an algae eater” and leave with whatever the staff gestured at — often a common pleco or a Chinese algae eater that will outgrow the tank or attack its tankmates inside a year. A deliberate species choice solves the algae problem without creating the next one. This algae eater fish for aquarium guide from Gensou Aquascaping at 5 Everton Park compares the realistic fish options by tank size, algae type and long-term temperament in Singapore community setups.

Otocinclus: The Nano Specialist

Otocinclus catfish (Otocinclus spp.) top the nano tank list. At 3-4 cm fully grown, a shoal of six fits a 45-60 litre tank. They rasp biofilm and diatoms from leaves without damaging plants — perfect for planted setups. The catch is fragility: they need a mature tank with established biofilm, and high mortality in the first two weeks after purchase is common. Source from the Otocinclus Catfish listing at SGD 4-6 each.

Bristlenose Pleco: The Mid-Size Worker

Bristlenose plecos (Ancistrus spp.) are the answer for 80-200 litre community tanks. They max at 12-15 cm, graze green algae on glass and hardscape, and consume leftover fish food as a bonus. Males develop dramatic bushy tentacles on the snout. Albino, longfin and super red morphs all circulate in Singapore — the Bristlenose Pleco listing usually has multiple phases.

Siamese Algae Eater: The Black Beard Killer

Siamese algae eaters (Crossocheilus oblongus) are the only reliable eater of black beard algae. At 12-14 cm they need 100+ litre tanks and tolerate community temperament reasonably well when young — older individuals become more territorial. Critical: verify species at purchase. Chinese algae eaters (Gyrinocheilus aymonieri) are sold as “Siamese” in low-grade shops and become aggressive adults. Check the Siamese Algae Eater listing for verified stock.

Chinese Algae Eater: Why to Avoid

Chinese algae eaters eat algae as juveniles and abandon the habit entirely as adults, turning instead to sucking slime coat off tankmates. They grow to 25 cm and become territorial with any bottom-dweller. Despite common availability at budget shops, this is a species to skip — the reputation as an algae eater is false past juvenile stage.

Flying Fox vs Siamese Confusion

Flying fox (Epalzeorhynchos kalopterus) looks nearly identical to Siamese algae eaters — both have a black lateral stripe. Key differences: the black stripe on a Siamese extends into the tail fin; on a flying fox it stops at the tail base. Flying fox also has red-tinted fins while Siamese are plain. Misidentification is so common that shop staff sometimes can’t tell them apart — look carefully before buying.

Hillstream Loach: The Cool-Water Option

Hillstream loaches (Beaufortia spp.) are specialists for high-flow 22-25°C tanks. Flat-bodied, they cling to smooth rock surfaces grazing biofilm. They do not suit warm tropical community tanks but excel in river biotope setups with chillers. The aquarium equipment section covers chillers for cooler-water biotopes.

Corydoras as Substrate Cleaners

Strictly, corydoras are not algae eaters — they scavenge leftover food and biofilm from the substrate. But they handle detritus effectively and pair well with nerite snails and otocinclus for a complete cleanup crew. Sterbai, bronze and panda cories all thrive in Singapore tap water. Feed Hikari Sinking Wafers to ensure they eat beyond what algae eaters miss.

Garra Species for Flow Tanks

Rainbow garra (Garra rufa) and doctor fish relatives are underused in Singapore. They graze rock surfaces aggressively, tolerate 22-28°C, and need planted tanks with strong flow. They work well in 100+ litre setups mimicking river conditions. Occasional stock arrives via specialist importers; Carousell lists individuals periodically.

Matching Fish to Tank Size

Under 50 litres: six otocinclus, no larger fish. 50-100 litres: add a bristlenose pleco or stick with otocinclus plus shrimp. 100-200 litres: bristlenose plus a Siamese algae eater trio. Above 200 litres: mix any combination. The bioload of a pleco is nontrivial — adding one to a fully-stocked 60 litre tank triggers ammonia issues within weeks.

Feeding Supplement Requirements

Every fish algae eater needs supplementation. Algae alone cannot sustain a bristlenose past young adulthood, and otocinclus starve without biofilm plus blanched vegetables. Hikari Algae Wafers, Tropical Green Algae Wafers and JBL ProNovo Pleco Wafer are the reliable staples. Blanched zucchini weekly covers nutrient gaps.

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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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