Is African Onion Plant a Good Plant for Australian Smelt?
African Onion Plant is a strong fit for Australian Smelt. The shared water window is realistic, and the plant has enough structure or resilience to be useful in a tank built around this fish. Fish pressure is low, so the plant can be judged mostly on water match, cover value, and layout role.
African Onion Plant
Crinum calamistratum
Australian Smelt
Retropinna semoni
Quick Decision
A plant can be technically compatible with a fish and still fail in the actual tank if the fish digs, chews, needs denser cover, or uses a different part of the layout.
100/100
The plant and fish suit each other well.
Workable overlap
Shared range: 20-24°C, pH 6.5-8, 5-18 dGH.
Low
Australian Smelt is not flagged as unusually hard on this plant.
Low cover
African Onion Plant helps with breaks lines of sight and provides surface cover.
Plant and fish setup supplies
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Plant and Fish Fit Notes
Use these signals to decide whether the plant is doing useful work for the fish, or whether it is only surviving beside it.
Overlap: 20-24°C.
Overlap: pH 6.5-8.
Overlap: 5-18 dGH.
Flow expectations are close enough for one layout.
Plant pressure: Low.
Shared Tank Conditions
African Onion Plant fits inside the water range normally used for Australian Smelt. The shared window is about 20 to 24 °C, pH 6.5 to 8, and 5 to 18 dGH, which gives you enough room to aim for stable middle-ground conditions.
Both do best with moderate flow, so circulation does not need to be split into competing zones.
Water type can work if the tank stays in the shared part of freshwater and freshwater to lightly brackish water conditions.
Fish Pressure and Plant Resilience
Australian Smelt does not put unusual pressure on this plant compared with harder fish-plant combinations.
African Onion Plant has low cover density, high uproot resistance, and tough / leathery leaves. It can also help with breaking up sight lines and surface cover.
It gives Australian Smelt useful visual shelter and line-of-sight breaks.
There is no special plant-pressure warning here, so solid anchoring and stable husbandry matter more than unusual protection.
Layout Fit
African Onion Plant is a bulb / tuber plant usually used midground and background.
Australian Smelt is a fish, so the pairing works best when the planting style supports how that fish uses space and cover.
African Onion Plant reaches about 100 cm tall by 30 cm wide and is usually bulb / tuber on or partly in substrate with nutrient-rich substrate preferred. That makes placement and anchoring more important than simply adding a larger bunch of stems or leaves.
In this pairing, the useful plant values are line-of-sight breaks and surface cover. Place it where Australian Smelt can actually use that structure instead of hiding the plant where it cannot do much.
Practical Recommendation
This is a sensible planted-tank choice for Australian Smelt, especially when you want the plant to do real work as cover, sight-line structure, or habitat detail.
The decision should center on layout quality: keep the plant in the zone where Australian Smelt actually swims, shelters, or uses cover.
Frequently Asked Questions About African Onion Plant and Australian Smelt
Is African Onion Plant a good plant for Australian Smelt?
African Onion Plant is a strong fit for Australian Smelt. The shared water window is realistic, and the plant has enough structure or resilience to be useful in a tank built around this fish. Fish pressure is low, so the plant can be judged mostly on water match, cover value, and layout role.
Can Australian Smelt damage African Onion Plant?
African Onion Plant is not especially vulnerable in this pairing compared with softer or more lightly rooted plants. Its tough / leathery leaves and high uproot resistance are the useful signals to watch.
African Onion Plant and Australian Smelt share a workable water window around 20 to 24 °C, pH 6.5 to 8, and 5 to 18 dGH. Keep the tank near the middle of that overlap for the best long-term result.
What does African Onion Plant add to a tank with Australian Smelt?
It gives Australian Smelt useful visual shelter and line-of-sight breaks.
What is the main risk in this plant and fish pairing?
The main risk is assuming one plant can solve every layout need. Fish still need the right hardscape, open swimming room, and cover density for their normal behaviour.
Other Fish for African Onion Plant
Freshwater Shark (Wallago)
Wallago attu
Wels Catfish (European Catfish)
Silurus glanis
Largemouth Bass
Micropterus salmoides
Australian Pearl Arowana
Scleropages jardinii
Asian Upside Down Catfish
Mystus leucophasis
Asian Arowana
Scleropages formosus
Other Plants for Australian Smelt
Afzel's Anubias
Anubias afzelii
Anacharis
Egeria densa
Ashy Pipewort
Eriocaulon cinereum
Baby Tears
Lindernia rotundifolia
Balansae
Cryptocoryne crispatula
Belinda's Buce
Bucephalandra belindae



