The pygmy corydoras is a tiny South American dwarf catfish that makes an outsized impact in nano setups — a perfect subject for anyone researching Pygmy Corydoras Care. At about one inch as an adult, this silver-bodied species shows a thin black horizontal stripe and brings lively, confident movement to a planted aquarium.
These peaceful fish school near midwater, perch on leaves, and periodically dart to the surface to gulp air — a normal behavior in calm, plant-rich waters. A well-planted tank with gentle flow and soft, slightly acidic to neutral water closely matches their natural habitat and keeps them comfortable.
Keep a group of at least 8–12 in a 10-gallon or larger tank so the school displays natural activity and confidence. Thoughtful scaping, fine sand substrate, reliable filtration, and cooler temperatures around 72–78°F help this small catfish thrive and become a centerpiece rather than just a background cleaner.
Key Takeaways
- Ideal for nano aquascapes — small size, big personality.
- Schooling (8–12) encourages natural, confident behavior.
- Soft, slightly acidic to neutral water and 72–78°F suit them best.
- Planted, low-flow tanks mimic their South American natural habitat.
- Occasional surface gulps for air are normal — monitor for excess breathing.
Pygmy Corydoras
Before you buy, learn how size, sex, and subtle patterns separate closely related small species. This brief identification snapshot helps you plan stocking, breeding, and display goals with confidence.
Species snapshot: size, lifespan, and native range
This tiny corydoras (Corydoras pygmaeus) reaches about an inch at maturity and has a streamlined body. Females are generally a bit larger and rounder than males, which is helpful when sexing a group for breeding or stocking.
With steady care pygmy corydoras typically live roughly three to five years in aquariums. In the wild they occupy calm tributaries and floodplain edges in parts of western Amazonia—recorded from the Nanay River (Peru), the Aguarico (Ecuador), and sections of the Madeira basin in Brazil.
How to tell pygmaeus from habrosus and hastatus
Correct identification matters because similar small species can differ in behavior and care. C. pygmaeus usually shows a thin, continuous horizontal black stripe on a clean silver body, and tends to hover in midwater.
- C. habrosus – salt-and-pepper or broken stripe pattern with a more mottled body and a distinctly banded tail.
- C. hastatus – marked by a large black spot at the base of the tail often accompanied by white dots and a different swimming posture.
When you see midwater hovering plus the thin stripe, you’re likely looking at C. pygmaeus. Always check seller labels and compare patterns carefully—mixtures and mislabels among these tiny corydoras species are common in the trade.
Setting Up the Ideal Nano Aquarium
Designing a compact, calm habitat is the first step toward a thriving nano community. When possible choose a longer footprint (a longer, lower tank) so a lively school can shoal, hover, and explore without feeling cramped — length matters more than height for midwater activity.
Quick setup checklist
- Tank: 10-gallon long (minimum) — larger is easier to maintain.
- School size: 8–12 pygmy corydoras for natural behavior and confidence.
- Substrate: fine sand to protect barbels and support natural foraging.
- Plants & hardscape: dense carpeting and fine-leaved stems (Java moss, dwarf hairgrass), driftwood, and leaf litter for cover.
- Filter & flow: sponge filter or adjustable-output filter for gentle, even circulation.
- Lid: tight-fitting hood to prevent jumps during surface gulps.
Tank size, space, and school size for a happy community
Minimum recommended: a 10-gallon tank with horizontal space helps natural behavior and reduces stress. If you want an easier-maintenance display or breeding room, choose a 15–20 gallon long. Make sure your tank footprint gives the school room to form loose groups and travel.
Substrate, plants, and hardscape that protect delicate barbels
Use fine, rounded sand (not sharp gravel) to prevent barbel damage and infection. Add dense plants such as anubias (tied to wood), Java moss, and fine-leaved stem plants plus floating cover; these create safe foraging lanes and microhabitats. Incorporate driftwood and leaf litter to introduce tannins and hiding spots that mirror their natural habitat.
Filtration, flow, lids, and acclimation
Select a sponge filter or a canister filter with adjustable output to provide biological filtration and low direct suction. Position flow to create gentle circulation without blasting the midwater zone where pygmy corydoras hover. Fit a secure lid to prevent jumping while they gulp surface air.
“Acclimate calmly and efficiently — minimize stress to avoid toxin release in small aquariums.”
- Pre-filter intakes with sponge guards to protect tiny fish and fry.
- Use float-and-drip acclimation for 30–60 minutes; keep the process steady but not overly long.
- Maintain stable water at 72–78°F and add fish slowly so the biofilter can mature.
Water Parameters and Quality Management
Keeping water steady rewards you with active, confident schooling and fewer surprises. Aim for predictable routines so the aquarium feels like a small, calm stream.
Temperature, pH, and mineral balance
Target a stable temperature of 72–78°F and a pH roughly between 6.2 and 7.5. For many hobbyists in typical tap-water regions, that means aiming for soft to mildly mineralized water; if your tap is hard, use a remineralizer or blended source water to make sure sudden swings are avoided. Note: KH (carbonate hardness) buffers pH — keep KH moderate and steady rather than chasing a single number.
Soft water, tannins, and gentle flow
Favor soft, slightly acidic to neutral water that mimics their natural habitat. Add leaf litter or botanicals for tannins and a mild tea-stained look that can reduce stress. Use low to moderate flow so filtration cleans quietly without pushing the school from its midwater hangouts.
Testing, changes, and routine care
- Test regularly (ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, pH) and log readings to detect trends early — a simple spreadsheet or notebook works well.
- Perform small, consistent water changes (weekly 20–30% is a practical target for most stocked nano tanks) rather than occasional large swaps to protect stability.
- Match replacement water: measure your tap’s GH/KH and pH and use conditioners or remineralizers to adjust—this prevents parameter shock when you top up or change water.
“Stability matters more than perfection—choose realistic targets and keep them steady.”
Troubleshooting quick tips
- Ammonia or nitrite spike: do an immediate 25% water change, check filter function, and reduce feeding until levels normalize.
- Sudden pH drift: halt water changes, test source water, and correct slowly using buffered replacement water or reverse-osmosis blends.
- Low oxygen signs (excessive gasping): increase surface agitation or add gentle aeration and confirm filtration flow is unobstructed.
Feeding the Pygmy Cory: Small Foods, Big Nutrition
Choose soft, sinking bites and occasional live protein to suit the delicate mouthparts of pygmy corydoras. A steady rotation of staple items and tiny treats keeps the school healthy, encourages natural foraging, and reduces competition.
Daily staples that work
Sinking wafers, nano pellets, and Repashy gel foods make a reliable backbone for a balanced diet. These sink at a gentle pace and soften slightly, allowing shy midwater and bottom-grazing fish to feed without being outcompeted.
Protein boosts and treats
Offer very small live or frozen items such as cyclops, daphnia, and baby brine shrimp—these are ideal, highly digestible protein sources for both adults and fry. Frozen bloodworms can be used sparingly if you chop or thaw and rinse them; whole pieces are often too large for tiny mouths.
Practical feeding strategy
- Feeding schedule: 2–3 small meals per day for a healthy school; include a protein boost 2–3× per week.
- Portion guidance: feed what the group can consume in 60–90 seconds—less is better in nano aquariums to protect water quality.
- Distribute food in multiple spots and at slightly different depths so timid pygmy corydoras and faster species both get access.
- Thaw frozen foods in a sieve under cold water and rinse to reduce excess phosphates; discard uneaten bits after a few minutes to avoid fouling.
- Rotate staples (wafers, gel, pellets) weekly to ensure balanced nutrition and prevent dietary gaps.
Starter food list (recommended)
- Sinking micro-wafers — good for daily grazing and algae supplementation.
- Nano sinking pellets — compact, nutrient-dense staple.
- Repashy or similar gel diets — customizable and gentle for small mouths.
- Microworms/infusoria (for fry) — essential first foods for newly hatched corydoras.
- Baby brine shrimp (live) — excellent protein and training food for fry and adults.
“Small bites, varied rotation, and careful portioning protect water quality while giving every fish a fair meal.”
Troubleshooting feeding problems
- Uneaten food lowering water quality: reduce portions and siphon debris; increase frequency of small water changes.
- Shy individuals missing meals: feed after lights dim or just before lights go off to let bottom and midwater feeders eat first.
- Growth or condition concerns: add more frequent protein boosts (small amounts) and monitor for improved vibrancy.
Behavior, Schooling, and Peaceful Tank Mates
Watch how this tiny school carves the middle space of the tank with graceful, synchronized motion. Their midwater swimming gives a planted aquarium life at eye level. At dusk they often become more active and curious, which is a great time to observe natural behaviors.
Midwater activity and surface gulps
Hovering and brief surface visits are normal — pygmy cory will sometimes dart up to gulp air. However, excessive surface breathing (repeated gasping across many fish) can signal low oxygen or water-quality problems. If you notice prolonged gasping, check temperature, aeration, and water chemistry immediately.
Choosing calm companions
Pick peaceful community fish with similar water preferences: neon tetras, chili rasboras, celestial pearl danios, and otocinclus are common matches. A calm, non-aggressive betta may work if temperament is suitable. Avoid larger or boisterous species that can bully or eat small tank dwellers.
- Keep a confident group: maintaining a steady school (8–12) unlocks bold, social behavior and reduces skittishness.
- Shrimp and snails: nerite snails and some dwarf shrimp typically coexist well as cleaners; be aware that tiny shrimp fry may be eaten while adults are usually ignored. Consider Amano or larger shrimp varieties and provide dense cover if you plan shrimp breeders.
- Provide cover: plants, driftwood, and leaf litter break lines of sight and reduce chasing, helping shy individuals feed and rest.
- Multiple feeding spots: distribute food across the tank so slow or shy fish get their share when faster feeders are present.
Quick compatibility checklist (water overlap)
- Neon tetra — pH ~6.5–7.5, temp 72–78°F: good match.
- Chili rasbora — pH ~6.0–7.0, temp 72–78°F: excellent match for planted nano tanks.
- Otocinclus — pH ~6.5–7.5, temp 72–78°F: great algae-eating companion if well-fed.
- Avoid: large barbs, aggressive danios, or cichlids that may nip or eat pygmy corydoras.
“Measured stocking, kind neighbors, and thoughtful scaping produce a serene, endlessly watchable tank.”
Breeding Pygmy Corydoras in the Home Aquarium
Spawning in a home tank responds best to richer diets and a brief, slightly cooler water refresh that mimics seasonal changes. Condition a colony of six or more adults with protein-rich meals for 2–4 weeks. The day before you expect courtship, perform a partial water change with water 2–4°F (1–2°C) cooler than the tank to encourage receptivity in females and increased activity in males.
Preparing and triggering spawning
Feed small, frequent portions of high-quality live or frozen protein (daphnia, cyclops, baby brine shrimp) to improve egg condition. Provide fine-leaved plants such as Java moss or floating roots—these collect single sticky eggs, which females deposit one by one during mating.
Step-by-step breeding protocol (quick)
- Weeks −4 to −2: Condition adults with frequent small protein feeds and stable water quality.
- Week −1: Reduce feeding slightly, then perform a cooler partial water change (20–30% with water 2–4°F cooler) to trigger courtship.
- Watch for courtship behavior and egg deposition on plants or smooth surfaces.
- After eggs are laid: decide whether to remove parents or transfer eggs to a separate, well-aerated breeding container.
Egg care and hatching
Inspect eggs daily. Fertilized eggs remain translucent yellow-tan; infertile eggs turn opaque white and should be removed to prevent fungal spread. Many breeders transfer eggs to a separate container with gentle aeration and add a small amount of methylene blue as an antifungal precaution—if used, follow product dosages carefully. Natural alternatives include alder cones or activated carbon in a separate rearing tank to reduce fungus risk.
Raising the fry
Hatching typically occurs in 2–5 days depending on temperature. Start fry on microscopic foods such as infusoria or 5–50 micron prepared diets immediately after yolk-sac absorption. Within a few days introduce live baby brine shrimp as they grow, then progress to microworms and finely crushed gel or pellet foods.
“Tiny, consistent feedings and frequent small water changes protect water quality and speed healthy growth.”
- Tip: Keep dense plants and Java moss in the rearing area to shelter eggs and supply microfauna for the fry.
- Timeline (weeks 0–4): Days 0–3: infusoria/powdered feeds; Days 3–10: baby brine shrimp; Weeks 2–4: microworms and soft gels, gradually increasing portion sizes.
- Water care: perform frequent small water changes (10–20% daily or every other day) during early rearing to maintain quality without shocking fry.
- Goal: Move fry to larger space and larger foods once fully free-swimming and robust.
If you want a printable checklist and more detailed feeding charts, consider adding a dedicated breeding tank and following a stepwise plan to reduce stress on both adults and fry.
Health, Diseases, and Preventive Care
Spotting issues early preserves lives and protects overall water quality. Check your aquarium daily for behavior changes, appetite loss, flashing, clamped fins, or visible lesions so you can respond quickly.
Recognizing common illnesses
Ich typically appears as tiny white spots, increased flashing, and occasional labored breathing. Prompt treatment, combined with steady parameters and good oxygenation, improves recovery chances. “Red blotch” or bleeding patches can indicate bacterial infections (sometimes called Columnaris or other bacterial problems) often triggered by stress; improving water quality and reducing handling are first steps before medicating.
First-response checklist
- Isolate affected individuals if possible (use a quarantine tank) to limit spread.
- Test water immediately (ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, pH, temp) and correct any out-of-range values with partial changes.
- Perform a 25% water change and increase gentle aeration while you investigate.
- Photograph symptoms and consult reputable references or a fish vet before selecting medications.
Quarantine and safe medication
Quarantine new arrivals for 2–4 weeks to catch parasites early. During quarantine observe appetite, breathing, and feces; treat visible parasites or infections in the quarantine tank rather than the display. Use fish-safe medications and follow product instructions precisely—some treatments (e.g., certain copper compounds) can harm invertebrates and sensitive catfish. If in doubt, consult product documentation or a veterinarian experienced with aquarium fish.
Stress reduction and handling
Keep an appropriate school size so pygmy corydoras feel secure; avoid sudden parameter swings and move fish calmly. Minimize handling and netting, and acclimate new fish slowly to reduce stress-related disease risk.
Cleaning routines and egg protection
Do small, regular water changes to maintain steady quality and protect biofiltration—weekly 20–30% is a practical target for many nano aquariums. Vacuum substrate gently in sections to remove debris without disturbing the whole tank. During breeding, remove infertile eggs promptly to prevent fungus and consider a separate rearing container with gentle aeration for higher success rates.
“Consistency—steady water, measured cleaning, and calm handling—builds resilience in small community fish.”
Oxygenation and monitoring tips
- Maintain moderate flow and surface agitation to improve oxygen exchange—sponge filters and gentle currents work well.
- Watch for signs of low oxygen: rapid surface gasping across the group, lethargy, or frantic swimming.
- Keep a basic test kit on hand and log readings to spot trends before they become crises.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Small aquariums demand careful choices to keep tiny schooling fish healthy. Avoiding a few predictable errors saves time, money, and lives.
Avoid large or aggressive tank mates. Never mix species that are big enough to eat or intimidate pygmy corydoras—predatory or boisterous neighbors cause chronic stress and injury in a small tank.
- Relying on oversized treats: whole bloodworms or large frozen pieces can be too big — chop or rinse treats, or choose micro options like cyclops or tiny frozen morsels. If you overfeed, siphon uneaten food and do a partial water change.
- Irregular maintenance: skipping routine care destabilizes water quality. Fix: schedule small, regular upkeep (weekly checks and partial water changes) to protect stability.
- Understocking the school: too few pygmy corydoras leads to chronic timidity and poor display. Fix: aim for the recommended group size so social behavior develops.
- Wrong substrate choice: sharp gravel damages barbels. Fix: use fine, rounded sand to protect delicate mouthparts and reduce infection risk.
- Overfeeding or overcrowding: both accelerate water-quality decline and disease. Fix: portion small feedings, monitor bioload, and keep stocking appropriate for tank size.
- Leaving unfertilized eggs: they quickly become fungal sources. Fix: remove infertile eggs promptly during breeding to improve hatch rates.
- Strong filter flow: intense currents exhaust tiny catfish. Fix: soften flow with baffles or adjustable outputs to create calm lanes.
- Rough handling: fast nets and abrupt moves stress fish. Fix: acclimate slowly, use gentle nets, and minimize handling.
- Relying solely on cleanup crews: shrimp and snails help, but they don’t replace deliberate feeding plans. Fix: plan feeding so all fish get proper nutrition and monitor shrimp/snail populations.
“Thoughtful stocking, steady care, and the right foods turn a nano tank into a lasting joy.”
Quick emergency actions
- Sudden ammonia/nitrite spike: perform an immediate 25–50% water change, reduce feeding, and check filter function.
- Massive die-off or severe disease signs: isolate healthy individuals, photograph symptoms, and consult a vet or experienced keeper.
Conclusion
With simple, steady care, these tiny catfish reward patience with graceful swimming and lively group behavior.
The pygmy corydoras do best in a planted, stable freshwater nano aquarium where soft water, fine sand, and gentle flow create calm lanes and safe space for the school to roam. For display and reliable social behavior, aim for a group of 8–12—though a minimum functional group can be six, larger groups (8–12) produce the most confident, natural interactions; make sure you balance group size with tank size and filtration.
Feed soft, sinking foods and small live or frozen treats so every fish gets nutrition without excessive competition. If you attempt breeding, follow a patient process: condition adults with protein, provide fine-leaved plants for single sticky eggs, remove infertile eggs promptly, and start fry on microscopic foods before progressing to baby brine shrimp.
Give pygmy corydoras room to shoal, steady water quality, and calm tankmates like snails or small peaceful fish, and your aquarium will reward you daily with movement, charm, and connection to the aquarium hobby.















