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if that tank was 36inches wide and a bit higher, then yes. Mind you 1 BGK in a tank is pretty boring. Perhaps add a group of guppies for their activity and movementSo thats a yes to a 18 inch BGK (Black Ghost Knife ) in my big tank? 170 cm Long, 50 High, 45 wide?
yes I like tanks to be at least twice as wide as the biggest fish in them. In your BGK tank the fish is 18inches so the tank should be at double that so the fish can turn around without touching the sides.Ahh so there is such a thing as too small a tank?
A filter and surface turbulence will compensate for any breathing sedate or active fishes do.
They are not wild fish that travel kilometres up and down rivers looking for food. They are domestic guppies that have probably never seen sunlight or been in a water body with more than 500litres.
The most common pheromones released by fish are breeding pheromones, and are harmless. They also encourage other fish to breed so are not an issue in an aquarium.
Unless wild fish manage to remain in a large deep waterbody like a river, they do end up in small confined puddles of water and have the same dirty water flowing over their gills. Many rivers dry up to some extent during the dry season and they leave pools, ponds, billabongs, lagoons behind with the fish in. The water slowly evaporates out of these pools and the fishes living in them have to deal with less oxygen, warmer water, more waste products, and even algae & fine sediment flowing over their gills.
Yes in a nice clean river the fish have clean water. But how many rivers have rubbish along the banks, chemical runoff going into them, algae and other man made and natural pollutants? Unless you get into the pristine reaches of the wilderness, you will probably find most rivers are not that clean. And neither is the ocean.
Yes it is better to have a nice large tank for fish, but as mentioned in my original post, not everyone has the finances to afford a big tank, nor does everyone have room for a big tank. And not everyone wants a big tank.
If the fish are breeding and not coming down with diseases all the time, then they are obviously reasonably healthy.
You said "sedate fish will respirate more slowly," Did you mean respire because fish can't respirate each other.
Filters containing colonies of beneficial filter bacteria will remove any ammonia & nitrite produced by big, small, slow or active fishes, and if the filter contains carbon, that will absorb pheromones, hormones & allomones. And good old fashioned water changes and gravel cleans will remove rotting organic matter (fish poop) from the substrate and ammonia, nitrite & nitrates, and pheromones, hormones & allomones from the tank water.
Domesticated animals develop genetic variations that differ from their wild counterparts after only 10 generations of captive breeding. Guppies have been bred for over 50 years and look nothing like their wild counterparts. Any expectations that were programmed into Guppies was lost or changed last century. Domestic Guppies do not look like or behave like wild Guppies because their DNA has changed from hybridisation and inbreeding over the last 50+ years. Domestic Guppies eat and breed, food is what they expect from their owners.
I'm unsure why you mention inappropriate husbandry when nobody mentioned that and this is about tank size/ water volume.
And I can infer that if a fish is breeding and not getting sick then it is reasonably healthy because sick animals do not breed.
I think this debate is leaving the realm of civility.
I agree. Its not a debate - its an argument and serving no useful purpose.I think this debate is leaving the realm of civility.