Compatibility (Freshwater)

Can Corydoras (typical) Live With Zebra danio? Tank Mate Compatibility

Corydoras (typical) and Zebra danio: typical outcomes, risks, water parameters, and setup tips. Usually compatible in most home tanks.

The Peppered Corydoras: Corydoras paleatus
Zebra Danio: Danio rerio

Corydoras (typical) and Zebra danio are a common community combination when basic rules are followed: appropriate group sizes, stable water, tiered feeding, and enough space. Success is mostly husbandry rather than luck.

Scientific names: Corydoras (typical) (Corydoras spp.) · Zebra danio (Danio rerio)

Compatibility summary

Corydoras (typical)Zebra danio
Typical verdictUsually fineUsually fine
Primary zoneBottomAll levels; fast
Main leverStable params; spaceStable params; space
OutcomeWhat you might see
Best caseBoth species eat, colour up, and ignore each other’s space
TypicalSome chasing, hiding, or feeding competition early on
Worst caseInjury, predation, or chronic stress—split the tank

Behaviour analysis

Corydoras (typical) typically uses bottom; Zebra danio uses all levels; fast. When those zones overlap heavily, you see more interaction—positive or negative. Temperament varies by individual; always watch new introductions for several weeks.

Why this pairing can work

Overlapping temperature and pH windows exist for many keepers, especially with research-grade test kits and consistent partial water changes. Different vertical zones reduce competition: one species feeds high, the other low. Armoured or fast-moving tank mates often survive where slow, flashy fish do not.

Plants, hardscape, and line-of-sight breaks turn “maybe” into “stable” more often than buying more fish of the same stressed species.

Why this pairing often fails

The usual failure mode is space + parameters: tank too small for adult size, temperature optimised for one fish but marginal for the other, or feeding that starves the bottom while the surface hogs food. Aggression spikes after rescapes, spawning, or when the larger fish hits a growth spurt.

Beginners often add the second species before the first is settled, or skip quarantine—then blame “aggression” when the real issue was disease or ammonia.

Environmental comparison

ParameterCorydoras (typical)Zebra danioPractical compromise
Temperature22–26 °C18–26 °CMeet both mid-ranges where they overlap; log daily during setup
pH / hardnessNeutral; soft–mediumWideStability beats chasing extremes
FlowGentleLikes flowBaffle or split flow so bottom vs surface species both cope

Tank setup guidance

Cycle the tank fully before adding either species. Add the less territorial or more fragile fish first when in doubt, then the bolder species after layout is stable. Feed in zones: surface first or last depending on who steals; offer sinking foods for bottom dwellers after lights dim if needed.

Provide hiding places at multiple heights and a clear escape path from any bully. Minimum volume should reflect adult sizes, not juveniles at the shop.

Risks

  • Parameter mismatch: long-term stress, faded colour, or shortened lifespan—test weekly at first.
  • Predation or fin damage: especially if mouth size grows into “snack” territory—rehome early.
  • Food competition: one species plumps while the other thins—split feeding methods.
  • Disease after mixing: quarantine new arrivals; treat in a hospital tank when possible.

Tips

FAQ

Is this pairing beginner-friendly? Often yes, with standard community discipline.

What tank size? Size for the larger adult plus appropriate group size for schooling species—search each species guide for minimums.

Who to add first? Usually the less aggressive or more sensitive species first, then introduce the bolder fish with rearranged decor.

Will they breed? Livebearers and some cichlids will—plan for fry control or extra tanks.

Final verdict

Summary: Usually compatible. Corydoras (typical) and Zebra danio are a common community combination when basic rules are followed: appropriate group sizes, stable water, tiered feeding, and enough space.

Also explore: Corydoras (typical) tank mates · Zebra danio tank mates. Guides: Corydoras (typical) · Zebra danio.

ADA
Aqua One
Chihiros
Dennerle
EHEIM
Fluval
Oase
Seachem
Tropica
Twinstar
UNS
ADA
Aqua One
Chihiros
Dennerle
EHEIM
Fluval
Oase
Seachem
Tropica
Twinstar
UNS
ADA
Aqua One
Chihiros
Dennerle
EHEIM
Fluval
Oase
Seachem
Tropica
Twinstar
UNS
ADA
Aqua One
Chihiros
Dennerle
EHEIM
Fluval
Oase
Seachem
Tropica
Twinstar
UNS