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Newbie question: Help me pick my fish!
Hello all,
I apologize for the newbie question, but I'm having trouble finding sites that will give me the information I want. I'm a college student who's always been fascinated by aquriums. In fact, I find myself making trips to our science facility so I can spend a few minutes making faces at the fish there! I had a betta last year, but alas, I had to leave for a few days and the friend who was looking after my apartment overfed him and he didn't survive. I'm ready to get another fish, but this time I'd like to have a small aquarium of my own. I'd like to get some relatively easy-to-care-for freshwater fish. I'd like to get one or two to start with and expand to four or five in a few months. I'd like them to be sociable so I can watch some interactions in the tank. I would prefer to house the fish in a smaller tank (5 gallons or so) to begin with, expanding to a 15-20 gallon or so tank when I decide to move up to 4 or 5 fish. I've looked at the old standby, goldfish, and am concerned that they take so much water to maintain. I'm only allowed a 20 gallon tank and from what I can find, I could only comfortably house three goldfish in such a tank. So, what species of fish should I be looking into? Is my goal of 4-5 fish in 20 gallons a little too overzealous? Are there any web resources you can recommend to help me either with a specific species of recommended fish, or help me decide what species to adopt? Thanks! |
You could try some fantail guppies - I found that they were really
hardy - one time I forgot to put dechlorinator in my new water - all the neons died but the guppies swam around merrily as if nothing was wrong! Anyway, guppies will swim all over the tank, but they are kind of dumb, they don't really have any personality as far as I can tell, they just follow your finger and beg you for food. Maybe you could get some neons or some kind of schooling fish - neons are pretty, and swim a lot as well. They can be a bit touchy though, and you'll need a heater. They say guppies need a heater as well, but I've kept them successfully without one, depends on your climate I suppose. |
wrote in message
oups.com... Hello all, I apologize for the newbie question, but I'm having trouble finding sites that will give me the information I want. I'm a college student who's always been fascinated by aquriums. In fact, I find myself making trips to our science facility so I can spend a few minutes making faces at the fish there! I had a betta last year, but alas, I had to leave for a few days and the friend who was looking after my apartment overfed him and he didn't survive. I'm ready to get another fish, but this time I'd like to have a small aquarium of my own. I'd like to get some relatively easy-to-care-for freshwater fish. I'd like to get one or two to start with and expand to four or five in a few months. I'd like them to be sociable so I can watch some interactions in the tank. I would prefer to house the fish in a smaller tank (5 gallons or so) to begin with, expanding to a 15-20 gallon or so tank when I decide to move up to 4 or 5 fish. I've looked at the old standby, goldfish, and am concerned that they take so much water to maintain. I'm only allowed a 20 gallon tank and from what I can find, I could only comfortably house three goldfish in such a tank. So, what species of fish should I be looking into? Is my goal of 4-5 fish in 20 gallons a little too overzealous? Are there any web resources you can recommend to help me either with a specific species of recommended fish, or help me decide what species to adopt? Thanks! I like the Eclipse 6 as a starter tank. It has a light and filter system that's pretty reliable (based on my experience). You can add an air hose and small heater, if needed, but those might not be necessary if stocking levels are kept low. Once you upgrade, your Eclipse 6 becomes a quarantine/hospital tank. Local pet stores as well as the big box stores carry the Eclipse systems. It's a good idea to price shop since prices can vary quite a bit. I agree with Beano about fantail guppies, but I stick with males unless you want a whole bunch of fish! Guppies breed like rabbits. (Or maybe it's that rabbits breed like guppies.) I would also toss in a live plant or two, something easy like one of the swords or Java Fern. If you can find some of the smaller Corydoras, two of those would be nice, so you'd have fish at the middle and upper levels, and fish at the bottom to watch. Cories tend to be rather hardy fish (in my experience), always a good thing for a beginner. Bronze cories are easist to find but Panda cories are a bit smaller and shouldn't be too hard to find. http://www.scotcat.com/factsheets/corydoras_panda.htm Once you move up to a larger tank, you can think about adding other species. I prefer smaller fish so can have more variety in my tanks than those who prefer much larger fish. But that shouldn't limit your choices. (Many of my fish like to hide so I don't actually see them very often. Most hobbyists wouldn't put up with that! g) Be careful about taking any advice from pet stores about fish that don't get very large (see the thread "Biggest lies my LFS told me"). There are a couple beginner's guides out there you might peruse. Here's one that looks pretty comprehensive: http://honors.montana.edu/~weif/firsttank/steps.phtml And you can't go wrong with NetMax's site: http://www.2cah.com/netmax/index.shtml Gail |
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wrote in message
oups.com... Hello all, I apologize for the newbie question, but I'm having trouble finding sites that will give me the information I want. I'm a college student who's always been fascinated by aquriums. In fact, I find myself making trips to our science facility so I can spend a few minutes making faces at the fish there! I had a betta last year, but alas, I had to leave for a few days and the friend who was looking after my apartment overfed him and he didn't survive. I'm ready to get another fish, but this time I'd like to have a small aquarium of my own. I'd like to get some relatively easy-to-care-for freshwater fish. I'd like to get one or two to start with and expand to four or five in a few months. I'd like them to be sociable so I can watch some interactions in the tank. I would prefer to house the fish in a smaller tank (5 gallons or so) to begin with, expanding to a 15-20 gallon or so tank when I decide to move up to 4 or 5 fish. I've looked at the old standby, goldfish, and am concerned that they take so much water to maintain. I'm only allowed a 20 gallon tank and from what I can find, I could only comfortably house three goldfish in such a tank. So, what species of fish should I be looking into? Is my goal of 4-5 fish in 20 gallons a little too overzealous? Are there any web resources you can recommend to help me either with a specific species of recommended fish, or help me decide what species to adopt? Thanks! Some ideas to choose from for a 3 to 6g tank (don't pick them all ! ;~). Betta (1 male or 2 females) Paradisefish (1) African Dwarf frog (1 or 2) White Cloud minnow (2 or 3) Harlequin rasbora (2 or 3) Apple snail (1) Shrimp (varies) Small tanks are difficult to maintain. The temperature in particular can bounce around (colder at night with the lights off), so these critters listed are a bit more tolerant of cooler temperatures. -- www.NetMax.tk |
I finally am going to speak up about water temperature.
This, like everything, is completely dependent on where you live. In my environs, the interior temperature of the residence never falls below 78 nor above 82 for 8 months out of the year, then it (interior) falls to 65 at night and rises to 72 during the day...I have electronic heaters for that small period. Do all of your environs change drastically from day to night? Even when it is 56 outside it is 78 inside here...without heating. |
Thanks for your replies everyone. I'm going to look at the species
mentioned. It sounds like I really should just start with the larger tank, so I'm going to put off my fish ownership for a few months until I can get a really awesome setup with a 20 gallon tank. As for water temperature, inside temperature will be pretty stable because I can't tolerate massive temperature changes either! Again, thanks everyone... you've given me some good starting points to help me research. |
On Mon, 5 Sep 2005 11:11:09 -0500, lgb wrote
(in article ): In article .com, says... I would prefer to house the fish in a smaller tank (5 gallons or so) to begin with, expanding to a 15-20 gallon or so tank when I decide to move up to 4 or 5 fish. I've looked at the old standby, goldfish, and am concerned that they take so much water to maintain. I'm only allowed a 20 gallon tank and from what I can find, I could only comfortably house three goldfish in such a tank. In a five gallon tank you could have half a dozen white clouds. Or platys. Given good filtration and weekly 20%-25% water changes. I second white clouds. I have two in a one gallon setup with a nano-filter. It's an open top system so there's a lot of evaporation. Every three days or so I take about a pint of water out and top it off with fresh water. The mondo grass is growing is breaking the surface and heading for the light fixture. My fish are as healthy as horses and have even spawned, though I think the filter killed the babies. -E |
Oh yeah, it's not just the fish that make the tank either, put in some
nice coloured gravel, and some live plants if you can keep them alive, but if not there are plenty of fake plants that look real. Some nice rocks and a broken flower pot can look good in there too, just make sure you was them with lots of water and even soak them for a few days before you stick them in, but I dare say if you get guppies, they probalby won't notice if you put them in dirty!! |
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