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Carp 37 is halfway right. As long as bettas are kept in little bowls with no room to swim, they are nothing but ornaments. Give them a little room to swim around, though, and they become completely different fish that will stay active and interact with their keepers. As long as their tank isn't too deep, the bigger, the better. 8 gallons is what I would consider a minimum tank size for them.Timberwolf's suggestion of a betta isn't a bad suggestion, except that they're pretty dull fish
Timberwolf wrote:Carp 37 is halfway right. As long as bettas are kept in little bowls with no room to swim, they are nothing but ornaments. Give them a little room to swim around, though, and they become completely different fish that will stay active and interact with their keepers. As long as their tank isn't too deep, the bigger, the better. 8 gallons is what I would consider a minimum tank size for them.Timberwolf's suggestion of a betta isn't a bad suggestion, except that they're pretty dull fish
Now I have a question to demonstrate just how far behind the curve I really am:Hi a friend of mine wants to buy a Biorb Life 8 gallon (square one) for their living room. Now I know everyone hates these things as they are not the best for fish but they want it as a kind of show piece.
My view is that there are 3 issues.Timberwolf wrote:what, if any are the problems with the BiOrbs and BioCubes?
In my opinion these BiOrbs are certainly not for beginners.Fish wrote:(BTW they are completely new to fish)
I would agreeracoll wrote:In my opinion these BiOrbs are certainly not for beginners.
True, but the spouse acceptance factor is high on those things. And not everyone has a fish room.MatsP wrote:But BiOrb are not low-cost tanks... I'm sure for the same money, you can get a 60-80 liter kit from one of the larger shop chains [this without looking any prices up]. And which makes somewhere around 15-20 US gallons, and thus a more stable environment for the fishes.
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Mats
No? You must be kidding. Most of the fishkeepers I know have...2wheelsx2 wrote:True, but the spouse acceptance factor is high on those things. And not everyone has a fish room.MatsP wrote:But BiOrb are not low-cost tanks... I'm sure for the same money, you can get a 60-80 liter kit from one of the larger shop chains [this without looking any prices up]. And which makes somewhere around 15-20 US gallons, and thus a more stable environment for the fishes.
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Mats