New fish for desktop aquarium
- Silent Doh
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New fish for desktop aquarium
Hello, members of planet catfish! I come to you again with a question about which fish to put in. I have a 1 gallon desktop aquarium which used to house a betta, unfortunately, the aquarium was higher than it is wide, so the betta could not get to the top poor fishie. Now, this aquarium came with an air pump and incandesant light and an undergravel filter. I can buy a mini heater for it to raise the temperature to 75 F, any suggestions? I was thinking maybe 3 neon tetras or something along those lines. My water specifications are:
Ph: 6.8
Ammonia: 0
Nitrate: 10 ppm
Ntirite: 0
Thanks!
Silent Doh
Ph: 6.8
Ammonia: 0
Nitrate: 10 ppm
Ntirite: 0
Thanks!
Silent Doh
Siphoning neon tetras through a small hose can be harmful to their health.
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- B-2
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little fish
I personally wouldn't put fish in one gallon jars, but that's just me. Neons do better longer aquariums because they like to zip across the tank. Guppies might be better for a small tank like that, until they have babies. You could use the tank to keep snails in, seeing that they die in your other tank. You could breed them for yourself so I would't need to keep giving you more. Oh yeah, the mini heaters I've seen only heat the water a few degrees, so they wouln't help much if the room is cold.
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- Barbie
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Cherry red shrimp might work, with a nice tall piece of driftwood and a heap of java moss. They like temps in the low 70's. Seriously though, they make 5 gallon desktop aquariums that are much more suitable for such a project and better yet, 12 gallon nano cubes. You're basically recreating a mini eco system. The smaller you go, the more chance that the slightest little problem will be fatal.
Barbie
Barbie
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- Fish Demon
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A pair of male Endler's Livebearers should be fine in there as long as there are some live plants. They are very colorful, hardy, and interesting to watch. They should also be fine without a heater as long as the tank won't get below about 65 degrees.
-Natalie
April 20, 2001
Q: How tall is Cartman in real life?
A: Well, Cartman doesn't exist in real life, but if he did he'd be two feet tall.
April 20, 2001
Q: How tall is Cartman in real life?
A: Well, Cartman doesn't exist in real life, but if he did he'd be two feet tall.
- Silent Doh
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The temperature of my house is about 70 F, so I don't need to worry about a cold tank. Actually, I have this tank because we just don't know what to do with it My brother originally got it for his betta, bob, but he died, we got another, but that one too died within a month. Now we have a very small aquarium too tall for a betta and don't know what to do with it. BTW, Ender's livebearers would be good, but my lfs doesn't stock them.
Siphoning neon tetras through a small hose can be harmful to their health.
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One US gallon is approximately 232 cubic inches. A cube to make us 232 ci would have the dimensions of 6.1 inches to each side. Obviously, if it's taller than wide, it must be around 8 or more inches tall. Calculating back from 8 inches we get: sqrt( 232 / 8 ) -> 5.4 inches bottom. At ten inches tall, the bottom would be around 4.5 inches square.
Obviously, any cubic equation with only one positive result could give an infinite number of results. A twelve foot tall one-gallon "tank" would be just over a square inch at the bottom .
Obviously, any cubic equation with only one positive result could give an infinite number of results. A twelve foot tall one-gallon "tank" would be just over a square inch at the bottom .
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You could have one male gourami in there, dwarf gourami that is. I'm not sure what there water temps are but since this is a desktop you could use the heat of the computer to warm the water a little.
The reason why a Gourami would work is that they, like the bettas, have a lung and therefore don't have to swim as much to receive Oxygen.
The reason why a Gourami would work is that they, like the bettas, have a lung and therefore don't have to swim as much to receive Oxygen.
- Chrysichthys
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