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I just purchased a 5 gallon hex with bio wheel, light, etc., and I am wondering what would be the best fish to get? I already have a betta in another tank, and I was hoping to get new kinds (fish, snail, etc) for this new tank, but I am concerned about the depth (being a hex tank), as well as the amount of space! Any possible combos would be great! Thanks~

2007-03-10 10:33:15 · 6 answers · asked by jessamae22 2 in Pets Fish

6 answers

Hex tanks have less top surface than standard rectangular tanks to provide oxygen, which, apparently, you already realize, so you wouldn't be able to have as many as you would in a standard rectangular tank. I, personally, run from livebearers as I just don't want to deal with fry. I have nowhere to put them and don't want to go to the trouble of trying to sell them or even give them away. I would stick with fish that remain very small such as tetras, rasboras or hatchets and maybe a snail. Each of these fish grow to around 2 inches each, so to be safe, I would only put in at the very, very most, 4 and that's still pushing it.

2007-03-10 11:21:07 · answer #1 · answered by Venice Girl 6 · 1 1

Get a mental image of a normal sized community tank and now think smaller. Even smaller. As small as you can get. Now you have it, the same kind of fish in the same ratios but the smallest varieties out there. Dwarf cory catfish, Sparkling gouramis, most any of the smaller killifish, small tetras, Least killiefish ( which is actually a livebearer) all make good bets for a micro community tank. Toss out any “rules” you know about inches per gallon and just keep the tank to about 5-6 fish. Another choice for tank inhabitants is to go for a species tank. A single pair of a small fish can not only live but thrive and breed in your new micro tank. Killifish, sparkling gouramis, apistogrammas and Least Killifish come to mind first, but there are obviously many more choices.

With quality lighting, a reasonable variety of plants are candidates for a mirco tank. Jave Moss, Jave Fern, Bladderwort, crystalwort all come to mind. Several of the bunch plants available at pet stores could be included as well if you are ready to do lots of pruning. There are also several varieties of small anubias sp. And even some micro swords available to spruce up your tank.

MM

2007-03-10 10:46:27 · answer #2 · answered by magicman116 7 · 1 0

For a 5 gallon tank, it is best to get small fish, as you do not want them to outgrow the tank. Also, keep the number of fish to about 5, you don't want over crowding. The best kind of fish would be guppies, mollies, or anything that doesn't get over 2 inches in length.

2007-03-10 11:39:28 · answer #3 · answered by Çåŗőľîņẫ§ħŷġĭ®ł 5 · 0 1

Such a tiny tank. The only thing I would put in there is a small school of White Cloud Mountain Minnows. Four at the most.
You are way too limited with such a small tank.

2007-03-10 13:13:57 · answer #4 · answered by something_fishy 5 · 0 0

No plecos--too massive. Tetras are good. White clouds are good. I believe the dwarf African frog advice. nonetheless you will desire to have good filtration for the little suckers! they're super-lovable and stay little (make beneficial your dwarf frog has WEBBED front ft and is not a clawed frog!) in case you have ONE male betta, you will upload in a pair of corys or a frog. For white clouds/tetras, you certainly desire a minimum of three of the two form to get education habit. in line with possibility 5 neon tetras and a frog or a betta (keep it clean, nonetheless.) Or a betta and 3 white clouds. Bettas certainly appreciate tank friends (nonetheless not different bettas! you will the two get struggling with or mating, finding on what intercourse betta you upload in, and you do not choose THAT!) i've got had fulfillment with assorted groupings of one betta+ different stuff. With suited monitoring, heating, and filtration, you are able to fudge the stocking regulations a splash. specific, you will get little warmers and little filters for 5-gallon tanks that paintings fairly nicely. And keep the temperature in a solid selection, too. Get a thermometer! i admire the unbelievable form because of the fact my fish choose to swim around them.

2016-12-18 10:17:09 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I have the same tank, I've had it set up since Dec. We have in it 1 male betta, 1 cory cat, 5 neon tetras, 1 ghost shrimp and a few little snails that snuck in on a plant. Everything is fat & active. My husband (who has had lots of fish experience) says we can put 2-4 more small fish in this mix.

2007-03-10 10:40:58 · answer #6 · answered by Shalvia 5 · 0 5

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