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i am going to buy a starter kit from my local pet shop that includes a ten gallon fish tank a filter some salt an air pump a jar of fish food and a hose for a air pump

2007-10-14 07:55:55 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Fish

7 answers

Clown fish are the best starter fish. Even the pet store will tell you that. and they will also give other sugestions for other starter fish.

2007-10-14 08:02:03 · answer #1 · answered by LYNN 2 · 0 0

My first salt water tank was 10 gallons, and I must say, it is quite a challenge to maintain proper salinity, pH, and other chemical attributes. Yet, it will help you develop the skills quickly, or you will have a tank full of dead fish.

As hard as it is to do this... go slowly! Start out with live rock and snails/crabs first. Once you have mastered maintaining the proper chemical levels (this could take a couple of months), add a damsel or two. Make sure there are hiding places- they are territorial. These fish are fairly hardy (and inexpensive) and can put up with the beginner salt water aquarist as they continue to learn a lot of the basics. Clownfish are not as hardy and a little pricier, but could still work as a good beginner fish. Try finding a pair that seem to be mates in the petstore tank so that fighting in your small tank is kept to a minimum. Just don't mix damsels and clowns, especially in a 10 gallon- one or the other.

For web sites... try researching forums. a good one that I have found is www.livingreefs.com/forums. Also, drsfostersmith.com is a great source for info.

Good luck!!

2007-10-14 10:05:12 · answer #2 · answered by Matt P 1 · 0 0

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
what are some easy low maintenance salt-water fish and some web sites for infomation?
i am going to buy a starter kit from my local pet shop that includes a ten gallon fish tank a filter some salt an air pump a jar of fish food and a hose for a air pump

2015-08-06 08:07:41 · answer #3 · answered by Petrina 1 · 0 0

Damselfish (including clownfish) are among the easiest to keep, but I wouldn't recommend starting with such a small tank if this is your first time doing saltwater. I always recommend a 55 gallon for beginners, but definitely not smaller than 29. The reason is that although saltwater is not that hard to maintain once you've learned the ropes, proper water chemistry is a lot more important than in freshwater. If something goes wrong with the water chemistry in a bigger tank, you may have some time to correct it before it kills all your fish, but in a small tank it would quickly wipe everything out. And saltwater fish aren't exactly cheap.

2007-10-14 12:32:43 · answer #4 · answered by AliDawn 7 · 0 0

A 10gal will not hold much in terms of saltwater fish. The stocking levels are much lower than with freshwater. Also with that setup you will at least need to add a protein skimmer. Add in a couple of pieces of live rock for hiding places and you should be able to keep a single clown fish, a single fire fish or a couple of very small gobies like clown gobies. Not more that that in a tank that small. (rule of thumb for salt water is 4 inches of fish for 10gal of water)

This is a website that should give you some information on fish that work well in nano tanks (which is what a 10gal is considered for salt water)

http://www.liveaquaria.com/product/scateg.cfm?pCatId=2124

2007-10-14 08:06:53 · answer #5 · answered by . 7 · 0 1

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2016-04-22 14:44:54 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

working on the rule 1" of fish for every 6 imp. gallon of water
if you had a 10 gallon tank & put some rockwork in it you could then have 1" of fish........... wow ........ (and don't forget to tell it not to grow)
i would invest a little bit more and would suggest a tank of at least 50 gallon would be the best starting point for marine fish.
otherwise go for tropical fish where the stocking ratio is 1" of fish for every two gallon of water.

2007-10-14 08:36:54 · answer #7 · answered by millypeed my choccie Lab 7 · 0 0

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2016-04-15 06:20:41 · answer #8 · answered by cristie 3 · 0 0

In a 10 gallon tank, I would say you can only fit about 3-4 fish in there. Due to the size of the ocean, they would need more space. I think you can probably get 1 percula clownfish, 2 Neon Gobies and maybe a different species of fish.

2007-10-14 08:17:57 · answer #9 · answered by Chris 5 · 0 3

Sorry to tell you this, but in an 10 gallon tank, you'll only be able to keep one fish. And you'll be limited to a clown goby or smaller shrimp goby, or possibly a firefish. Even the smallest clownfish need to have a 20 gallon tank as an adult. A 29-55 gallon is the smallest tank size suggested for someone who's never had a saltwater tank before.

There's a lot more to successfully keeping a saltwater tank than just buying a kit and putting in the fish. Many people will tell you how hard they are to keep, but IMO, the difficulty is related to smaller tank sizes and lack of research and preparation on their part. I keep both saltwater and freshwater tanks (several of each, actually), and once you get the tank set up, they're not much more difficult than freshwater if you've planned it properly. It's good if you have some freshwater fishkeeping experience first, or all that I'm about to tell you may seem a bit overwhelming. There is a little more equipment, the water chemistry is a bit more involved, and any of the "specialized" materials (and the fish) for saltwater tend to be more expensive.

I would strongly recommend that before you go too far in planning, that you do some research into the different types of tanks (fish-only, which is the easiest and cheapest; fish-only with live rock, which give you added biological filtration; and reef, which is the full-blown marine set-up with corals, anemones, shrimp, etc., which can be the most difficult and IS definitely the most expessive type). That's not to say you can't start with a fish-only, then add other items to the same tank as you get some experience and want to try more organisms.

Obviously, you'll need a tank, unless you've kept freshwater in the past, and already have one you're planning to convert to salt. The larger of a tank you can use, the better - saltwater fish tend to be larger and more territorial/aggressive than traditional freshwater "community" fishes and more like cichlids in their behavior, so some planning is necessary on just what you can keep together. The larger the tank you have, the more options that are open to you. I started with a 29 gallon, and moved into a 55 in 6 months because I didn't have enough room to keep the fish I wanted. The best way to determine the size, though, is to research the fish you want first, to be sure they are all compatible, their adult sizes, and the minimum tank size needed for each, and plan the tank and equipment from there.

If you need to get a stand for the tank, try to get solid wood. The particleboard stands won't hold up if they get wet and the glue separates, and the iron/metal stands will corrode if any salt gets on them (or, you could get a metal stand, just use a flannel-backed tablecloth under the tank to protect the stand from splashed water).

Here's a basic idea of the other items you'll need:

FILTER: You'll want to get one that's properly sized (filters 5x-10x the tank volume per hour - check the gallons per hour rating). There are lots of choices, and what you'll need will really depend on budget, what you're trying to keep, and personal preference. I'd consider the best type to be a refugium or wet/dry trickle filter. Next best would be a canister, followed by a biowheel, then a standard hang-on-tank. Unless you're using a fine sand or oolite substrate, you can also use an undergravel filter to supplement filtration, but I'd suggest powering it with a reversible powerhead to blow the water up through the substrate (prevents stuff from building up under the filter and clogging it).

POWERHEAD(S): To provide more water circulation in hard to get to places. This also helps circulate dissolved oxygen to the bottom of the tank. Have at least two for a larger tank.

HEATERS: For a saltwater tank 30 gallons or larger, I'd suggest getting 2 and putting one on each end. This will provide more even heating, and your tank has a back-up if one heater gives out. Figure the correct size as 5 watts per gallon (for a single heater) divided by 2 (if using 2 heaters). If you need to heat the water more than 10 degrees above the room temperature, go one wattage size higher.

LIGHTING: If you never want anything but fish, you can use the standard lighting and hood made for your tank. You might want to upgrade the lamps to a 10,000K tube or a 50/50 actinic. If you're going to try corals, anemones, etc., go with a compact fluorescent, metal halide, or combo system - these will provide more intense light that they'll need for photosynthesis.

SUBSTRATE - you want something made of aragonite to help keep the pH from changing, I like the smaller shell material that Carib-Sea puts out - it doesn't have to be live sand, either. Some folks like crushed coral, but the particle size is bigger than I like, and it tends to have a lot of dust that never rinses completely out. Another very fine grained material is oolitic aragonite (looks like small white balls) and aragonite sand. Here's an idea of the materials available: http://www.caribsea.com/pages/products/dry_aragonite.html While it's possible to keep a marine tank with regular aquarium gravel or no substrate, the aragonite will keep the pH from falling below 7.8 (it should be 8.2-8.4).

SALT MIX: If you're only keeping fish, you can go with one of the less expensive brands of synthetic sea salt. If you get any invertebrates (shrimp, snails, crabs, corals, anemones, etc.), switch to a better quality mix before you add them. These cost a little more, but you won't need to be using additives for the trace elements they need either.

HYDROMETER: This measures the amount of salt that's dissolved inwater. There are two kinds you can get, one made of glass that floats on the surface (more accurate, but easy to break) and a plastic container that has a needle that rises and falls as the amount of salt changes (less accurate, bubbles attaching to the needle gives false readings). For fish only, you want the specific gravity to read 1.020 - 1.026. If you're keeping inverts, you want it to be 1.024 - 1.026.

WATER TESTING KIT: minimum of pH, ammonia, nitrite, nitrate.

CLEANING SUPPLIES: elbow length gloves, gravel vacuum, 5 gallon bucket, large plastic container and powerhead for mixing the salt (to be done well ahead of water changes), algae scraper, razor blades (for coraline algae and diatoms that like to attach to the glass).

WATER CONDITIONER: for removing chlorine or chloramine from your tap water (unless you plan to use a reverse osmosis filter or buy RO water, which is preferred for a reef tank).

The following are optional, but strongly suggested:

PROTEIN SKIMMER: This removes dissloved and small organic materials that would normally contribute to the ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate in your tank. Not 100% necessary for fish-only tanks, but will be handy if you have inverts to keep up good water quality by removing organic materials that become nutrients for algae.

GLASS COVER: This reduces evaporation and keeps the fish inside the tank (some are jumpers), although with a metal halide lighting system, it can overheat your tank.

LIVE ROCK: This give the tank a more natural appearance, provides hiding places for the fish and inverts, and increases the biological filtration. Not to mention, you get all kinds of cool critters that hitchhike into your tank (shrimp, snails, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, sea stars, etc.).

CHILLER: If you use metal halide lighting, or the water temperature regularly gets above 85o (for corals or anemones, fish can take a little more heat), you may need to invest in a chiller to keep the tank cool. The water temperature should run 76-80oF.

There may be additional items that you could need, such as kalkwasser to raise your pH if you can't get it to 8.2, but you won't know these until you get the tank set up and running, and test your water.

You may decide that you want to use a UV sterilizer, but in my opinion, these are unnecessary. They don't necessarily kill all the parasites and disease-causing organisms, and they only affect free-floating algae, not any that's attached to your glass, rock, or substrate. The bulbs also need to be replaced yearly. Rather than pay the high price for one of these, you'd do better to buy an inexpensive 10 gallon setup kit and a heater and use these as a quarantine tank.

Before going out and buying all this, I would suggest some reading to see what you're getting into by keeping saltwater. I did research for almost 2 years before I set up my first tank, and I had about 20 years of freshwater aquarium experience already. Rushing into a saltwater setup usually doesn't give you good results, and the equipment and fish are a little too expensive to be finding out in a few weeks you got something that's not appropriate for what you want for your tank. I'd also recommend a good reference book for some research. Either of these would be a good one to start with: The New Marine Aquarium by Michael S. Paletta. Microcosm Ltd. ISBN 1-890087-52-1 or The Conscientious Marine Aquarist by Robert M. Fenner. Microcosm Ltd. ISBN 1-890087-02-5

You asked for some websites for information, so I'll include some specific links in the one I like best (wetwebmedia) and general links for it and one other with good info:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/marsetupez.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/marineSetUp.htm
http://www.peteducation.com/index.cfm?cls=16
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/

As far as the fish, what species are good for starters will depend largely on the size of your tank. Even though they are hardy, I STRONGLY recommend against damsels, mostly because of their aggressivness - add one of these, and they'll terrorize any fish you try to introduce later. The exception I'd make here is the green reef chromis.

You'll want to add the smallest and most peaceful species first, and this will reduce some of the aggression in the tank. It's a general guideline that you shouldn't mix fish of the same color or body shape, or different species from the same families to prevent any of the fish from seeing another as a potential rival. There are a few species that can be kept in schools or in mated pairs, but this is the exception rather than the rule. I prefer the smaller semi-aggressive and peaceful species myself, but your preferences might be different. Some of the ones I would recommend as starters are the chromis, a pair of ocellaris clown (the "Nemo" fish - any two juveniles will work because the dominant one will become a female, the other a male), Bangaii cardinalfish (if you have a good saltwater person at your fish store, they should be able to pick out a male and female for you), longnose hawkfish, canary blenny, jawfish, clown goby, scissortail gobies, and firefish. That's more than you should keep in a 55 as adults, so you'll need to so a little choosing of which you like, or you might want something completely different. Here are a few links to look at, so you get an idea of care level and prices (as well as the minimum tank size each needs, so you can see for yourself why a 10 gallon isn't a good choice for a saltwater tank):

http://www.marinedepotlive.com/
http://www.tropicalfishoutlet.com/
http://www.liveaquaria.com/product/categ.cfm?pcatid=15
http://www.saltwaterfish.com/

2007-10-14 13:53:37 · answer #10 · answered by copperhead 7 · 0 1

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