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I have heard that the original one will eat the new one, so I don't know whether or not to get another one.

2006-12-27 13:43:17 · 15 answers · asked by Kept My Mouth Shut 1 in Pets Fish

I used to have another goldfish in there too, but it got sick and died. Both of them were bought at the same time. If i got another goldfish I would get a bigger tank for them.

2006-12-27 13:49:22 · update #1

15 answers

Contrary to popular belief, goldfish can NOT be kept is bowls - this is why your other one died. Goldfish are huuuge waste producers and churn out ammonia. They are also big fish (the small type, the fancies, 5-7" and other types, 1.5-3 feet) and need a lot of swimming room. One fancy goldfish needs a minimum of 15 gallons to itself.
So, your goldfish won't eat a new goldfish, but they won't do too well, because the ammonia will build up so quickly. If you're able to upgrade to a larger tank (30 gallons would be okay for 2 fish) then by all means, get him a friend :)
If you only have your one goldfish, try to get a 15-20 gallon tank with a real filter for him. You can probably find it used, for like 20-30$.

In the meantime, be sure to do frequent water changes to keep ammonia levels down.

2006-12-27 14:23:58 · answer #1 · answered by Zoe 6 · 1 0

A fish bowl is the worst type of aquarium you could get besause it doen't alow for good gas exchangeand and it's to small for a goldfish anyway. If you want to get an extra goldfish you should get at least a twenty gallon aquarium. Goldfish grow to suit their surondings so if there is a small goldfish and it's plased in a large aquarium it will grow bigger, but if a large goldfish is plased in a smaller aquarium than it was already in it will not grow smaller. Common and commet goldfish can grow to be two feet in length but fancy variaties such as fantails and orandas grow to be ten to fifteen inches in ponds.Alsow a large goldfish will not eat a smaller goldfish if the smaller goldfish is at least one and a half inches long because by then the smaller fish can easily swim away from the larger fish. I have a seven inch comon goldfish and just five days ago I got six goldfish each an inch an a quarter inch long and they have been just fine.

2006-12-27 16:56:00 · answer #2 · answered by Austin O 1 · 0 0

Use the formula, 2 inches of fish per gallon or water. If you don't ahve a big enough bowl for the amount of fish you have then you'll kill them. Goldfish do not eat eachother, but bigger ones sometimes pick on the littler ones (pecking order). Give them some rocks to hide under. Remember, rocks and decorations reduce the total amount of water in your bowl. Make sure the bowl is big enough for the amount of fissh you want to have. Water is their air, keep it clean. That's the best solution for healthy fish.

2006-12-27 13:59:13 · answer #3 · answered by bungholian_monk 1 · 0 2

Congratulations on your prize! I hate it while they provide away stay fish, although. it is so merciless. :( As all people has been saying, goldfish from the uncomplicated are in many circumstances very poorly bred and would carry each form of illnesses. however, goldfish are very hardy and he would perhaps stay to tell the story in case you would be able to provide him good care. :) There are some issues you will be attentive to if he lives, although. he's a subject-loose goldfish, meaning that he is going to prevail in as much as 18 inches in length. he will choose for a seventy 5 gallon tank or pond with an substantial filter out, all via himself. while stored in tanks that are no longer super sufficient, goldfish go through stunted strengthen that can carry approximately a painful dying from organ failure. they sometimes go through ammonia poisoning too. they could stay 25 years or greater yet in substandard situations are unlikely to make it. I understand that the flaws i'm saying here would sound very extreme, and that i understand that they are costly. for this reason i could look for somebody who has a pond and rehome your fish with them. however, you could start up him out in something like a 10 gallon tank with a 20 gallon filter out, and improve the tank as he grows, from 10 to twenty to fifty 5 to seventy 5. however you do, don't get a fish bowl for him. they're seen very inhumane. they'd't be filtered, so ammonia builds up very immediately and poisons the fish, and that they're a great way too small for goldfish. keeping a fishbowl is likewise an excellent form of paintings - you're staring at on a regular basis 50% water adjustments there. In a tank, you ought to do in basic terms 2 25% adjustments a week. A bowl will make an ok non everlasting domicile for him, yet you could no longer in basic terms use directly faucet water. you go with for water that has been dechlorinated. that's complete maximum appropriate with a dechlorinator from a petshop. top is particularly good. in case you could no longer get carry of that, use bottled water. it somewhat is not suited, yet greater useful than water with chlorine in it, particularly if it somewhat is in basic terms short-term. This all would sound loopy and extreme, yet once you desire to your fish to stay his complete existence and acheive his superb person length, you surely need to furnish him with the domicile he will choose for. in case you could no longer try this, rehome him and look at an option puppy. :) determine to continuously do learn till now you purchase. :)

2016-10-19 01:46:37 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It depends on how big you tank is if it is to small the fish will be over crowded and pick on each other. Just remember like people fish need space.

2006-12-27 13:49:36 · answer #5 · answered by shadow8634 2 · 1 0

I doubt it will eat the new one if the new one is the same size, but you're pushing your bioload with two goldfish in a bowl.

2006-12-27 13:46:04 · answer #6 · answered by AK 3 · 1 0

yes unless they are different sizes or different kinds of goldfish becuase one may eat the other.

2006-12-27 13:49:23 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you dont need to worry about that they can be put in the same bowl but not forever because like a person they will get territorial and start to fight

2006-12-27 13:47:11 · answer #8 · answered by The Fishy Boy 1 · 0 0

Make sure they are the same size. It is true, bigger ones will nibble smaller ones.

2006-12-27 13:50:00 · answer #9 · answered by Ann, The Decatur Gardener 1 · 0 0

prior answer good if bowl is large enough and has enough surface to allow good oxygenation exchange in the water.

2006-12-27 13:46:32 · answer #10 · answered by Donald W 4 · 0 0

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