You don't need a bubblestone, but bless you for giving that betta room to swim, and clean, warm water to do it in! You may be new but you're already a good fish owner compared to most betta owners. Keep up the good work, and keep asking questions if you need. :)
2007-03-09 16:27:49
·
answer #1
·
answered by ceci9293 5
·
1⤊
0⤋
You can add a bubble wand or something similar for decoration but it is not necessary. The filter should be all you need for a 10 gallon tank. A betta will also go up to the top for air. With just one betta in the tank there is plenty of air. If that betta is a male don't put another male betta in that tank. Bettas usually don't get along with guppies. You'll be fine if you don't over load the tank with fish.
2007-03-09 16:07:23
·
answer #2
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
First i'd like to welcome you to a very addicting hobby. Once you get more advanced in this field you'll realize that fishes are well more complicating then you'd think.
Alot of people highly believe that betta's don't require that much maintenance, but in reality, betta's are like every other fishes out there. I'm glad that you decide to go with a 10 gallon instead of a cup or a small vase like many. It's true that bettas can live in small places because where they originate from, they can survive in puddles during the summer time when lakes and streams dry up, but it's not their preference when it comes to a home.
I have a golden betta named King which i placed in a 15 gallon hex with a penguin filtration system, a heater [keeping it at a range from 78-82 degrees] and a airstone under the gravel for more air circulation.
What's so great about bettas are they have a special air-breathing organ called a labyrinth that allows them to live in water with low oxygen levels, and they are able to swim to the top to breath themselves, unlike a more complex fish that needs high oxygen levels to survive.
If you're planning on adding more fishes, i'm sure an airstone bubble would be greatly appriciated by your fishes, but it's not neccessary because your filter provides alot of the air-flow that is evenly distributed throughout the water. [Example, after the water filters through the filter, it comes out back onto the water causing splashes which pushes air bubbles towards the bottom.]
Good luck and enjoy your experience. Hopefully you'll soon be able to advance onto salt water, like we have and are able to upkeep more complex and beautiful creatures, like lionfishes and puffers.
2007-03-09 18:41:34
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
No your tank is fine.You don't need a bubble stone for air.All a bubble stone does is ajust the bubble.With an air stone you have fine bubbles.With out a bubble stone you have big bubbles.I have a 35gal fish tank with an under ground filter system and I don't use bubble stones so I have big bubbles.I think big bubbles look prettyer then little bubbles.The pet store told me that I didn't need bubble stones and thats what bubble stones was for.As long as you have a filter,heater on your tank your fish are getting air and they will live.
2007-03-09 16:09:54
·
answer #4
·
answered by IRIS C 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Bettas (among others) have a labyrinth organ that allows them to take air from the surface, so no they don't *need* an air stone or other form of aeration, but it improves overall water quality and would be beneficial. Make sure your betta has lots of places to hide and plants (real or fake) to fill up that tank. Remember- the setup a fish prefers is based on their natural habitat... Bettas are native to rice patties - a large volume of open water will stress them.
2007-03-09 16:42:22
·
answer #5
·
answered by Celena 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
I used to, they was so non violent. however the greater modern-day aquariums, regardless of the reality that purportedly greater effective for the fish, are purely too busy. And there are too many little ones rampaging (actually) around--mothers and fathers seem to convey their little ones there and purely set them loose and the toddlers go working and screaming around--if I have been a ensure i could be greater careful simply by fact pedophiles could desire to honestly haul a toddler away and it could be a on an identical time as earlier the ensure figured their youngster replaced into lacking. I stay in a straight forward length city and the final time i replaced into on the city aquarium, human beings have been leaving their bags and handbags on those benches, unattended, and wandering off to look on the different tanks! Plus the front value for the aquarium is something like $35 now--too wealthy for me to do.
2016-10-18 00:22:51
·
answer #6
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
No. Airstones don't really increase the amount of oxygen in the tank much...but they will keep the water circulating. The surface area that is exposed to the air is what is important...but bettas are used to being in low oxygen content swamps and rice paddies..they are able to breathe air directly from the surface if necessary to augment low water levels of o2
2007-03-09 16:48:37
·
answer #7
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋
airstones really do nothing for adding oxygen to the water like they are supposed to. a good filter will make little waves across the top of the water that adds oxygen. a betta doesn't breathe oxygen out of the water anyway so you don't need it unless you like the bubbles. you will see him go up to the top and breathe in oxygen. i keep bettas without any filter -- i think they are happier and make better bubble nests that way.
2007-03-09 19:14:04
·
answer #8
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
2⤋
An air stone is not needed for a betta. Just keep the water clean and toxin free and your fish will be very happy. Also for bettas you need some place it can hide out in.
2007-03-09 16:03:25
·
answer #9
·
answered by Palor 4
·
1⤊
0⤋
Nope. As long as you have the filter moving water in the tank, it will add more oxygen to your water than an airstone will.
2007-03-09 16:03:28
·
answer #10
·
answered by copperhead 7
·
2⤊
0⤋