Monday, February 16, 2009

Tips For Choosing An Aquarium

Tips For Choosing An Aquarium

Author: Janet Ashby

There is a wide range of sizes and shapes of aquariums as well as a choice of glass or acrylic aquariums, so how do you choose the best aquarium for your home and for the fish you intend to keep? We have put together a guide to help you to choose the perfect aquarium.



Where to Locate Your Aquarium



The first thing to decide before you make a purchase is the location for your new aquarium. You must take account of the final weight of the aquarium when filled with water if you intend to place it on a shelf or table. A twenty gallon tank, once filled, will weigh about two hundred pounds! Do you need a stand or a specially designed cabinet?



Aquarium Size



Aquariums for the home come in a huge range of sizes from tiny glass bowls to huge five hundred gallon tanks. You will want an aquarium that is the right size for your home and for your fish. The first thing to consider is the location you intend for the aquarium. Measure the area to ensure the aquarium you choose will fit.



One thing to consider is that a bigger aquarium requires less maintenance. Small aquariums are much harder to keep the water balance correct, are easy to overcrowd and rotting food or vegetation can have an immediate affect on the health of the fish. A good size for a beginner is between twenty and thirty gallons. Decide how many fish you wish to keep. Very roughly you can keep one inch of fish to every gallon of water, but remember this is a rough estimate and a lot will depend on the type of fish and how well maintained the aquarium is. Always understock a tank rather than overstock!



The best way to choose the size of the tank is to purchase the biggest tank within your budget that will fit comfortably in the location you have chosen.



Aquarium Shapes



Since the introduction of acrylic aquarium, different shapes have been added to the traditional rectangular shape including cylinder, hexagon and round aquariums. There are also aquariums designed to be wall mounted and coffe table aquariums. Despite all these innovative designs the rectangular aquarium is still the best as the the area of water surface compared to the water volume is large which is important for allowing the exchange of gases with the air. Other shapes, with a smaller surface area compared to water volume, will often need more frequent water changes and more maintenance.



Do You Need a Glass or Acrylic Aquariums?



Both materials for aquariums have their advantages and disadvantages. The traditional glass aquarium is heavy and can spring leaks at the seams. Leaks are easy to fix however and usually only occur in an older aquarium. They are usually cheaper than acrylic aquariums. They only come in rectangular or square shapes.



The newer acrylic aquariums are lighter than glass and come in all sorts of innovative shapes. They rarely spring leaks as there are no seams. They are more expensive than glass aquariums but generally last longer. They are easy to scratch however so never clean with any kind of abrasive chemical or other chemicals which can fog the glass. Acrylic aquariums used to yellow with age but the newer materials stay clear throughout their lifetime.



Advantages



Acrylic Aquariums : long lasting, leak free, innovative shapes



Glass Aquariums : Cheap



Disadvantages



Acrylic Aquariums : expensive, easily scratched



Glass Aquariums : Heavy, tend to spring leaks

About the Author:
For more information about aquariums and fish keeping and some good deals on aquariums check out Cheap Aquarium or Cheap Acrylic Aquariums

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/pets-articles/tips-for-choosing-an-aquarium-707936.html

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

How to Keep Fancy Guppies

1. When starting out, only acquire one or two trios of the same line. To maintain a single strain and keeping it pure, you will need about 8 to 10 tanks. It is better to use smaller 5 gal tanks for breeders and fry. Guppies can live in a wide range of water conditions. The ideal water chemistry is a pH of 7.2 and moderate hardness but they will adapt to water that is between 6.4 to 8.6 if acclimated properly. The first thing to do is place your newly acquired breeding stock into a clean (do not use soap) container that is large enough to hold each trio, plus large enough so you can add an equal amount of water from their new tank. DO NOT FLOAT UNOPENED BAGS. After placing your trio into this container, let them settle down for a short time.

After a short time (app. 15 minutes) start adding about 3 - 4 ounces of water slowly into the container. Do this slowly over a period of about one hour, until you have almost doubled the volume of water. Do not rush this important acclimation process. Make sure the fish cannot jump out of container. When you are done and they fish have settled down, carefully pour them into their new tank. DO NOT FEED THEM. Observe them and be patient. After about an hour you may feed them ever so slightly, a little baby brine shrimp or a pinch of dry food is plenty. Do not feed again until the following day. In about a month you should start having fry. Be prepared to have tank space available to raise each drop of babies. After 3 - 4 weeks you must begin to separate virgin females from among the fry for your future breeders.

continue reading at http://guppyz.tripod.com/guppy_tips.html

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