Zebra Loach

Botia striata

A peaceful striped loach and an excellent natural snail controller.

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DifficultyBeginner
Min. Tank Size110 L
Temperature22.0โ€“26.0 ยฐC
pH Range6.0โ€“7.5
Max Size9.0 cm
Lifespan10-15 years
DietOmnivore
TemperamentPeaceful
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Overview

The Zebra Loach (Botia striata) is a peaceful striped loach and an excellent natural snail controller. It is one of the most recognisable members of the loaches group kept by Australian aquarists, valued for its appearance, manageable adult size of around 9.0 cm and its peaceful nature.

This guide covers everything you need to keep the Zebra Loach successfully - ideal tank size and setup, water parameters, diet, suitable tank mates, breeding, how to tell males from females, and the health problems to watch for. Rated Beginner to care for, it can live for roughly 10-15 years when its needs are met.

Natural Habitat & Origin

Loaches come from the streams, rivers and floodplains of South and South-East Asia, where they forage along the bottom among rocks, roots and leaf litter. Many are scaleless or fine-scaled, which makes clean, stable, well-oxygenated water especially important.

Understanding where a fish comes from is the shortcut to keeping it well: matching the temperature, water chemistry and amount of cover it evolved with is far more effective than fighting against its nature.

Tank Size & Aquarium Setup

Provide a minimum of 110 litres for the Zebra Loach. Because it is a shoaling fish kept in groups, floor space and swimming length matter more than height.

Use a secure, well-fitting lid (this species can jump, and labyrinth fish also need a warm layer of air above the water).

Provide smooth substrate plus plenty of caves, pipes and tangled wood, as loaches feel safest with lots of hiding places to dart into.

Mature, well-cycled biological filtration is essential before adding any fish. Match the filter's flow to the fish - moderate for most, stronger and more oxygenated for hillstream and riverine species.

Water Parameters

Keep the Zebra Loach in stable water at 22-26 ยฐC with a pH of 6.0-7.5. It is adaptable across a moderate range, so stability matters more than hitting an exact number.

Test your water regularly: ammonia and nitrite must always read zero, and nitrate should be kept low (ideally under 20-40 ppm) with routine partial water changes. Sudden swings in temperature or chemistry cause far more illness than water that is slightly 'wrong' but stable, so always dechlorinate and temperature-match new water.

Diet & Feeding

The Zebra Loach is an omnivore and an easy feeder. A quality flake or micro-pellet forms a good staple, enriched several times a week with frozen and live foods such as bloodworm, daphnia and brine shrimp for colour and condition.

Feed small amounts once or twice a day - only as much as the fish clears in a minute or two - and consider one fasting day a week. Overfeeding is the single most common cause of pollution and disease in home aquariums.

Temperament & Tank Mates

The Zebra Loach is an excellent peaceful community fish. It mixes happily with other calm species that share its temperature (22-26 ยฐC) and pH (6.0-7.5) needs, are too large to be eaten, and are not large enough to eat it.

Keep it in a small group rather than singly; it is a social fish that is shyer and less active when kept alone.

Breeding

The Zebra Loach is rarely bred in home aquariums; commercial stock is typically farm-raised with hormones, so home spawning is considered very difficult.

Even if you do not plan to breed it, understanding this behaviour helps you recognise it in the tank and respond appropriately - for example by adding cover for fry or by giving a guarding pair some space.

How to Tell Males from Females

Many loaches are very difficult to sex visually; females are often rounder-bodied when mature, but reliable differences are subtle and vary by species.

Common Health Problems

Like most aquarium fish it is susceptible to white spot (ich), fin rot and fungal infections, almost always triggered by stress or poor water quality. Scaleless and sensitive, loaches react badly to poor water and to copper-based or full-dose medications - treat at half strength. Quarantine new arrivals for 2-4 weeks to keep your main tank disease-free.

Prevention is far easier than cure: keep water pristine, avoid overstocking and overfeeding, quarantine new arrivals for two to four weeks, and watch daily for early warning signs such as clamped fins, loss of appetite, flashing (rubbing on objects) or laboured breathing. Caught early, most problems are very treatable.

Is the Zebra Loach Right for You?

The Zebra Loach is a rewarding choice for beginners and experienced keepers alike, as long as you can provide at least 110 litres, water at 22-26 ยฐC and pH 6.0-7.5, the right diet and a proper group of its own kind.

Get those basics right and you will enjoy a healthy, colourful Zebra Loach for around 10-15 years. For tank planning, try our free aquarium tools, and browse our fish, plant and disease guides to build the perfect community.

Frequently Asked Questions

What size tank does a Zebra Loach need?
Allow at least 110 litres. Because it should be kept in a group of 5 or more, a longer tank with open swimming space is better than a tall, narrow one.
Can I keep a single Zebra Loach?
It is happier in a small group of its own kind. A single fish will survive but tends to be shyer and less active.
What water conditions do Zebra Loach need?
Aim for a temperature of 22-26 C and a pH of 6.0-7.5, with stable, well-filtered, low-nitrate water. Stability matters more than chasing an exact number.
How big do Zebra Loach get?
Adults reach about 9.0 cm in length, so plan your stocking and tank size around that adult size rather than the size they are sold at.
How long do Zebra Loach live?
With good water quality and a varied diet, expect a lifespan of around 10-15 years.
What do Zebra Loach eat?
They are omnivores and readily take quality flake or micro-pellets, plus frozen and live treats such as bloodworm, daphnia and brine shrimp.
Are Zebra Loach good for beginners?
Yes - Zebra Loach is hardy and forgiving, making it a great choice for newer fishkeepers, provided the tank is cycled and maintained.

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