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#1
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![]() "Cplus" wrote in message e.rogers.com... The two remaining mollies (had another black one die on me this morning) that I had in 20g tank I moved to my daughter's 10 gallon tank (because the 20g is high in nitrites still). I moved them because their back fin (not sure of the specific name) was starting to curl in (they're lyretail mollies). The 10G tank already houses : 1 guppy 2 angels 5 tetras (2 glow light, 3 pristella) a pleco and now I've added the mollies. Will that be too big of a load? It doesn't seem like it when I write it down but it seems busy in the tank. I thought a good rule of thumb was one inch of fish per square inch of surface. And I thought angelfish ate tetras? Marcus |
#2
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![]() Marcus Fox wrote in message ... "Cplus" wrote in message e.rogers.com... The two remaining mollies (had another black one die on me this morning) that I had in 20g tank I moved to my daughter's 10 gallon tank (because the 20g is high in nitrites still). I moved them because their back fin (not sure of the specific name) was starting to curl in (they're lyretail mollies). The 10G tank already houses : 1 guppy 2 angels 5 tetras (2 glow light, 3 pristella) a pleco and now I've added the mollies. Will that be too big of a load? It doesn't seem like it when I write it down but it seems busy in the tank. I thought a good rule of thumb was one inch of fish per square inch of surface. And I thought angelfish ate tetras? Marcus One fairly common standard (but not fully accurate) is one inch of fish per gallon of water. That equates to about one inch of fish for every twenty square inches of surface. Using a standard 15 gallon tank with a surface of 12" x 24", that's 288 square inches, or more than twenty feet of fish using your rule. Not all angels eat all tetras. A better statement would be almost all fish will eat fish small enough to fit in their mouth. Jim |
#3
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![]() "Jim Brown" wrote in message .. . Marcus Fox wrote in message ... "Cplus" wrote in message e.rogers.com... The two remaining mollies (had another black one die on me this morning) that I had in 20g tank I moved to my daughter's 10 gallon tank (because the 20g is high in nitrites still). I moved them because their back fin (not sure of the specific name) was starting to curl in (they're lyretail mollies). The 10G tank already houses : 1 guppy 2 angels 5 tetras (2 glow light, 3 pristella) a pleco and now I've added the mollies. Will that be too big of a load? It doesn't seem like it when I write it down but it seems busy in the tank. I thought a good rule of thumb was one inch of fish per square inch of surface. And I thought angelfish ate tetras? Marcus One fairly common standard (but not fully accurate) is one inch of fish per gallon of water. That equates to about one inch of fish for every twenty square inches of surface. Using a standard 15 gallon tank with a surface of 12" x 24", that's 288 square inches, or more than twenty feet of fish using your rule. Not all angels eat all tetras. A better statement would be almost all fish will eat fish small enough to fit in their mouth. Yes, I was a bit confused when I wrote that. But I find the 1 inch per gallon rule innacurate, particularly as a 1 inch fish weighs about 1/8th of a 2 inch fish of the same shape, so it clearly uses more like 1/8th of the oxygen and produces a corresponding amount of waste products. This table should be a bit more accurate, therefore. (It is not mine) Size No. Per cm2 of surface Approx. cm2 per fish 1 400 2.5 2 110 9 3 50 20 4 25 40 5 12 80 6 8 125 8 5 200 10 2 500 12 1 750 15 1 1100 HTH Marcus |
#4
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![]() Marcus Fox wrote in message ... "Jim Brown" wrote in message .. . Marcus Fox wrote in message ... "Cplus" wrote in message e.rogers.com... The two remaining mollies (had another black one die on me this morning) that I had in 20g tank I moved to my daughter's 10 gallon tank (because the 20g is high in nitrites still). I moved them because their back fin (not sure of the specific name) was starting to curl in (they're lyretail mollies). The 10G tank already houses : 1 guppy 2 angels 5 tetras (2 glow light, 3 pristella) a pleco and now I've added the mollies. Will that be too big of a load? It doesn't seem like it when I write it down but it seems busy in the tank. I thought a good rule of thumb was one inch of fish per square inch of surface. And I thought angelfish ate tetras? Marcus One fairly common standard (but not fully accurate) is one inch of fish per gallon of water. That equates to about one inch of fish for every twenty square inches of surface. Using a standard 15 gallon tank with a surface of 12" x 24", that's 288 square inches, or more than twenty feet of fish using your rule. Not all angels eat all tetras. A better statement would be almost all fish will eat fish small enough to fit in their mouth. Yes, I was a bit confused when I wrote that. But I find the 1 inch per gallon rule innacurate, particularly as a 1 inch fish weighs about 1/8th of a 2 inch fish of the same shape, so it clearly uses more like 1/8th of the oxygen and produces a corresponding amount of waste products. This table should be a bit more accurate, therefore. (It is not mine) Size No. Per cm2 of surface Approx. cm2 per fish 1 400 2.5 2 110 9 3 50 20 4 25 40 5 12 80 6 8 125 8 5 200 10 2 500 12 1 750 15 1 1100 HTH Marcus You are right in that fish mass has more of an impact than fish length. Unfortunately, while mass is definitely better but harder to estimate, there are also factors such as activity, age, aquarium parameters, and types of food. Your chart still needs some work. The first column sets out square cm's of fish but it might be better to set out cubic cm's. The second column sets out square cm's, and how many one inch fish could be stocked in an aquarium with a (roughly converted) one inch square surface. You can try but I don't think anyone will deveope anything better than a rough guide for 'bread and butter' fish from the LFS. Far better to learn from the experience of others and add that to one's own observations. Jim |
#5
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![]() "Marcus Fox" wrote in message ... "Jim Brown" wrote in message .. . Marcus Fox wrote in message ... "Jim Brown" wrote in message .. . Marcus Fox wrote in message ... "Cplus" wrote in message e.rogers.com... The two remaining mollies (had another black one die on me this morning) that I had in 20g tank I moved to my daughter's 10 gallon tank (because the 20g is high in nitrites still). I moved them because their back fin (not sure of the specific name) was starting to curl in (they're lyretail mollies). The 10G tank already houses : 1 guppy 2 angels 5 tetras (2 glow light, 3 pristella) a pleco and now I've added the mollies. Will that be too big of a load? It doesn't seem like it when I write it down but it seems busy in the tank. I thought a good rule of thumb was one inch of fish per square inch of surface. And I thought angelfish ate tetras? Marcus One fairly common standard (but not fully accurate) is one inch of fish per gallon of water. That equates to about one inch of fish for every twenty square inches of surface. Using a standard 15 gallon tank with a surface of 12" x 24", that's 288 square inches, or more than twenty feet of fish using your rule. Not all angels eat all tetras. A better statement would be almost all fish will eat fish small enough to fit in their mouth. Yes, I was a bit confused when I wrote that. But I find the 1 inch per gallon rule innacurate, particularly as a 1 inch fish weighs about 1/8th of a 2 inch fish of the same shape, so it clearly uses more like 1/8th of the oxygen and produces a corresponding amount of waste products. This table should be a bit more accurate, therefore. (It is not mine) Size No. Per cm2 of surface Approx. cm2 per fish 1 400 2.5 2 110 9 3 50 20 4 25 40 5 12 80 6 8 125 8 5 200 10 2 500 12 1 750 15 1 1100 HTH Marcus You are right in that fish mass has more of an impact than fish length. Unfortunately, while mass is definitely better but harder to estimate, there are also factors such as activity, age, aquarium parameters, and types of food. Your chart still needs some work. The first column sets out square cm's of fish but it might be better to set out cubic cm's. The second column sets out square cm's, and how many one inch fish could be stocked in an aquarium with a (roughly converted) one inch square surface. You can try but I don't think anyone will deveope anything better than a rough guide for 'bread and butter' fish from the LFS. Far better to learn from the experience of others and add that to one's own observations. Jim The table wrapped. There was supposed to be three columns. The first column was fish length in cm, and the last column ended up under the first column. Here it is again Size/cm Fish/1000 cm2 surface cm2 / fish 1 400 2.5 2 110 9 3 50 20 4 25 40 5 12 80 6 8 125 8 5 200 10 2 500 12 1 750 15 1 1100 First column, length of fish in centimeters. Second column, number of that size fish you can have in each 1000 cm2 of surface area. Third column, approximate number of square centimeters of surface needed for each fish of that size. Marcus Where did this chart originate from? IMHO, it has a small bit of merit, but deriving a relationship between body size and a surface area requires a known rate of circulation (like zero). As soon as you double your water flow immediately under the surface, your theoretical bio-load capacity doubles. Triple the flow and you triple your bio-load capacity. Surface calculations were more popular in the 60s. As filtration systems became more reliable, powerful and were left on 24 hours a day, deriving a relationship to water volume became more practical. The surface calculation is still useful for calculating the mean time to oxygenation stress in the event of a power failure. You then just have to use a fudge factor for species. Otos will expire early, before others are showing stress, and labyrinth equipped fish, and many catfish will labour along much longer than the others. I really think the 1"/gal has nothing to do with oxygenation, (or with anything else tangible). The closest comparison might be biological capacity. If you have a 20g rated filter on a 20g tank, than having ten 2" fish probably gives you a comfortable operating margin for safety. You could double the filtration, but now the tank might get too crowded, depending on the species (some species would be too crowded with ten 2" in a 20g). No matter how useless these charts and tables are, we still need them, (if nothing else, to poke holes in their logic ;~) NetMax |
#6
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![]() Size/cm Fish/1000 cm2 surface cm2 / fish 1 400 2.5 2 110 9 3 50 20 4 25 40 5 12 80 6 8 125 8 5 200 10 2 500 12 1 750 15 1 1100 First column, length of fish in centimeters. Second column, number of that size fish you can have in each 1000 cm2 of surface area. Third column, approximate number of square centimeters of surface needed for each fish of that size. Marcus Where did this chart originate from? Dr Axelrod's Mini Atlas of freshwater aquarium fishes, page 715, put forward by one of the authors, Dr. Cliff W. Emmens. Marcus |
#7
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Can you guys please trim your posts.
"Marcus Fox" wrote in message ... "Jim Brown" wrote in message .. . Marcus Fox wrote in message ... "Jim Brown" wrote in message .. . Marcus Fox wrote in message ... "Cplus" wrote in message e.rogers.com... |
#8
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![]() "Graham Broadbridge" graham at peachy dot org wrote in message ... Can you guys please trim your posts. I did, lol - but my last post wasn't showing up on my news server, so here it is again, just in case... Size/cm Fish/1000 cm2 surface cm2 / fish 1 400 2.5 2 110 9 3 50 20 4 25 40 5 12 80 6 8 125 8 5 200 10 2 500 12 1 750 15 1 1100 First column, length of fish in centimeters. Second column, number of that size fish you can have in each 1000 cm2 of surface area. Third column, approximate number of square centimeters of surface needed for each fish of that size. Marcus Where did this chart originate from? Dr Axelrod's Mini Atlas of freshwater aquarium fishes, page 715, put forward by one of the authors, Dr. Cliff W. Emmens. Marcus |
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