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10 Gallon Saltwater Aquarium?

boberga

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So I have a 10 gallon aquarium that I had set up for a few monthis now to hold 4 platy fry that where born and now there's only 1 that needs to grow a tiny bit more before I transfer her over to the 20 gallon tank then I could shut down that tank, but I don't want to. So the thing I want to know is it possible to make a saltwater tank out of the 10 gallon tank and keep 2 clown fish in there, but I don't know because I have no. Experience with salt water tanks. And some people say that a pair of clownfishes would work in 10 gallons then. There's others saying it wouldn't. If it is possible to make a saltwater tank 10 gallon what would fir in it? Right now the tank has a tetra whisper 10, a aqueon quietflow 10, 50 watt heater and a 5 watt 9" clip on light. I would like to know what I would need to buy how what the minumum is thanks.
 
Hi.give my 90 litre saltwater journal a read.I wouldn't put a pair of clowns in a 10 gallon.
 
you can and people will but having had lots of exerience with marine I wouldnt now.
 
I set up a 65 litre tank 6 years ago and within weeks bought a bigger one. If you are doing salty just get the biggest tank you can fit/afford and it makes life so much easier and  enables you to keep better stock with less fluctuations in water parameters due to the higher volume
 
You certainly can. However, small marine tanks are the most difficult ones to keep. Nutrient buildup, trace element maintenance, and salinity fluctuation are much harder to manage. What might be a small change in another tank takes over quickly in a nano. 
 
Also, there are few marine fish that will be healthy long term in such a small tank. All the clown species require a larger tank, most goby, all the damsels, all the anthias, all the toby, require larger tanks. You could keep it as a coral tank with a hermit or two and a shrimp and a few soft corals. 
 
If this is your first marine tank I do advise against such a small one. 30 gallons is easier, 55 is best for a beginner tank. They are much more forgiving of the difficulties inherit with marine keeping. 
 
tcamos said:
You certainly can. However, small marine tanks are the most difficult ones to keep. Nutrient buildup, trace element maintenance, and salinity fluctuation are much harder to manage. What might be a small change in another tank takes over quickly in a nano. 
 
Also, there are few marine fish that will be healthy long term in such a small tank. All the clown species require a larger tank, most goby, all the damsels, all the anthias, all the toby, require larger tanks. You could keep it as a coral tank with a hermit or two and a shrimp and a few soft corals. 
 
If this is your first marine tank I do advise against such a small one. 30 gallons is easier, 55 is best for a beginner tank. They are much more forgiving of the difficulties inherit with marine keeping. 
very well said
 

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