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Buy a nano tank. They come with what you need if you only plan on a clownfish. You will also need to purchase live sand or aragonite and about ten pounds of live rock. The prices of live rock will vary alot depending on where you live (this - answers - is international). This tank http://www.drsfostersmith.com/Product/Prod_Display.cfm?pcatid=10677&ref=3969&cm_mmc=LiveAquaria_DFS_Links-_-Fish_Supplies-_-LiveAquaria_Gen_Page-_-Aquariums_Furniture&subref=AA&N=2004+62760 has the lighting and filtration that you need for under $200.00. You will also need to buy a marine test kit, hydrometer, and salt.
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2006-09-29 07:47:07 · answer #1 · answered by iceni 7 · 0 0

Smaller tanks really are harder to keep b/c the slightest imbalance can kill off a whole tank. I'd go maybe a size or two up in gallons. Clown fish really don't need a lot of tank space especially if you get it an anemone it'll just love on it all the time (really cute). So if you stick with the 10 gallon don't do more than a pair of clown fish and stay on top of all your levels to monitor for problems. Saltwater tanks are costly. You are looking at several hundred dollars just for a tank, filtration, sand, live rock, anemone, fish, salt and all the little stuff that goes with it (tank scraper, chemicals, nets, food, etc.) not to mention the upkeep. I'm with the other poster make nice with a small fish shop employee and learn from them. I also always recommend to people that they buy a comprehensive book on saltwater aquariums. One that tells you how to set up an aquarium, gives you a rundown on different fish and invertebrates as well as troubleshooting.

2006-09-30 08:18:06 · answer #2 · answered by stargirl 4 · 0 0

I agree completely with Bonsylar. Marine tanks are very hard to keep, and there's no way you can keep a 10 Gal salt water tank.

Salt water fish require extremely stable conditions, including temperature and salt. This is because the ocean habitats they live in are so large that temperature and mineral concentrations rarely ever change. A 10 Gallon tank is tiny in comparison, and even a slight miscalculation can cause salt levels to change too much and kill your fish.

If you really want a marine tank go for a much larger size. If that's out of your budget or spare time to maintain then there are some wonderfully colourful tropical freshwater fish which are just as beautiful as marine fish, and much easier and cheaper to keep. Some suggestions for great beginner freshwater fish would be guppies, mollies or neon tetras. Any of them would happily live in a 10 Gal tank.

2006-09-28 23:04:46 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Saltwater tanks are tricky for even experts and the smaller the tank, the harder it is to maintain. Please consider a larger tank.
Go to a reputable fish store in your area. (Not Petco or Petsmart, those people are idiots.) Talk to the employees. They have lots of experience and advise for you. Buy your stuff there too, you will pay a little more, but it's worth it to have a good relationship with experts that will answer questions.
Saltwater tanks and the fish are very expensive. Remember that the electricity bill will rise significantly.
The smallest a beginner should attempt is 55 gallons. Look at it this way, you will be able to have more fish.
Good Luck.

2006-09-28 17:17:16 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Go to the pet store and price everything. Saltwater fish are very expensive. Do all your homework first before you jump in to a saltwater tank setup.

2006-09-29 03:42:09 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

in case you have in no way stored a marine tank, do exactly not bypass there with a 10gal. while you're purely pondering a heater and pH attempt kit, you have not have been given the journey to run a nano marine tank. it is not only "troublesome", it is going to desire daily finding out and adjusting of the parameters, and that's not purely pH. then you definately wind up with a tank that would desire to help a million tiny fish and a pair of shrimp. not attempting to be rude, only attempting to shop you from lots of lifeless fish. So a million - freshwater. 2 - small community fish. Dwarf or clean gourami, neon tetras, guppies, platies and so on. 3 - No algae eating fish are perfect, yet snails and shrimp are a stable determination. you will desire a heater till you persist with an rather constrained selection of fish. pH is nicely in regards to the least significant component in fish retaining. particular it is consumer-friendly to degree, and you will desire to purchase chemical ingredients to play with the stages, yet too many novices fuss in regards to the pH, attempting to maintain that "suited", whilst there are extra significant matters going incorrect. till you have very delicate fish, and comprehend somewhat extra approximately water chemistry, only bypass away the pH on my own. Ian

2016-10-18 04:22:27 · answer #6 · answered by oleyar 4 · 0 0

I don't know the cost but I thought I'd mention that clown fish should have live anemone to play in.

2006-09-28 17:15:49 · answer #7 · answered by Deb S 1 · 0 0

Read this post from earlier lots of good info.


http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AgCJg3.7PZrvr4mDyUNnUkXsy6IX?qid=20060928095830AATJceK

2006-09-28 17:16:42 · answer #8 · answered by tikitiki 7 · 0 0

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