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i have a 155 gal tank, and I dont have anything in it.. The water cycled for the past 4 weeks, so its ready for some fish, but I dont know what o put in it? any ideas? Ciclids are kinda what I was looking at but I dont know which ones can be put together and how many for my size tank?

2006-11-14 10:46:19 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Fish

7 answers

the general rule of thumb for how MANY fish you can put in a tank is 1 inch of fish per gallon of water. which means you could have 155 one inch fish, or 77 1/2 2 inch fish, and so on.

as for finding out what kind of fish you want in a tank, thats entirely up to you. if youre just starting your first aquarium, i wouldnt suggest a salt water tank, those require constant upkeep, and you could kill every fish in your tank just by forgetting about it for a couple days.

so that leaves fresh water. there are quite a few possibilities with fresh water fish, try checking out the chart found here.

http://www.auspet.com/fish08.html

youll want to find out which fish are school fish, and need to be with a few others of their kind, and which fish do best on their own. in the end, most aquarium shops have knowledgable staff who will walk you through which fish are good for your tank, and what sort of equipment youll need.

2006-11-14 11:35:02 · answer #1 · answered by sslowbliss 3 · 0 0

If you do Malawi cichlids you would need to put about 80 of them in the tank at least. If you do not keep them crowded they will all attack and kill each other. When I got my first fish tank I got 12 malawis and put them in a 55, next morning they were all dead except two. I now have a 20 gallon tank with 21 cichlids that are all happy as could be. As they grow a little larger in size I will be getting them a bigger tank. But my advice is a nice community tank instead of cichlids if its your first tank.

2006-11-14 14:38:12 · answer #2 · answered by Chisox2335 2 · 0 0

open season. but if you want a community tank get peaceful fish like guppies mollies sowardtails and maybe even a calm male beta. 155 inches of fish is your limit just remember that. ciclids are very aggressive so chose wisely probably African. GOOD LUCK!!!

2006-11-14 11:06:47 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Wow, what i would give for a 155 gallon tank, your some lucky :p Go to this site, www.elmersaquarium.com it has many many many fish, info on fish, community tanks, etc, good luck.

2006-11-14 10:56:47 · answer #4 · answered by Flames Fan 3 · 0 0

Wow a huge community of African mbuna. That would be awsome to look at. Put in lots of rock cover. They breed and live in rocks and are bright colors.

Alternatively, you could do a "hap" set up. These are more open water fish, get larger than mbuna and are "fish eater" (you don't feed live fish though, they get along great on pellets).

Look these up. You won't be disappointed.

2006-11-14 15:48:43 · answer #5 · answered by SabrinaD 3 · 0 0

you've a good number of thoughts the following. typically the guideline is a million inch of fish in step with gallon of water. Now of route there are exceptions to this rule besides the undeniable fact that that is typically best if that is your first tank to commence with it. don't be fooled by a small fish some can improve fairly tremendous, over 12 inches in a good number of circumstances, those are literally not the fish for you. Fish can and could outgrow their tank. do not recognize the guy length of a fish? DO YOUR DUE DILIGENCE. continually evaluate fish swimming aspect to boot, do not over crowd the single area of the tank, typically spread it severe, center and bottom. some fish that would want to healthful your tank are: Zebra danio (max out at a million") (shoaling fish meaning 3+ fish is a thanks to flow) Neon Tetra (max out at a million") (preparation fish, meaning 3+ fish is a thanks to flow) Cory Catfish (max out at 3", besides the undeniable fact that i have had some adventure with 4"-ers) Dwarf Gourami (max out at 3-4") (one in step with tank max, they're a territorial fish) Mollys/Platys (max out at 4" some smaller) diverse tetras (study the fashion, yet all are preparation fish) stay remote from semi-aggressive and aggressive fish, to boot as cichlids. savour your tank! Cheers.

2016-11-29 03:41:38 · answer #6 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

I'd get oscars or jack dempseys or a combo. The big cichlids are really cool and have tons of personality. Or do a mbuna tank, they're so beautiful and you could have a ton of them in a tank that size.

2006-11-14 12:45:24 · answer #7 · answered by Carson 5 · 0 0

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