Well, i have a 29 gallon tank, and i have a few questions about it ._.
i plan to keep pearl gouramis(wanted blue rams but cant find any anywhere D neon tetras, and pygmy Corys
my tank dimensions are 30x12x19 inches. I heard that you should use the general rule of 1 inche of fish per one gallon so i would be able to keep 29 inches of fish. But, i read in like 3 fish keeping books that it really dependes on your surface area. It said that the inches of fish your tank could hold depended on the LxW of your tank divided by 10 and 30*12/10 is 36 inches of fish. Which one is more accurate? i dont know how much of each fish i want yet because i still dont know my max capacity :3
ok, another question about my gravel and filter. I heard that i should get sand for my Corys but then i also wanted an underground filter. The problem with that is that then, the sand would get in the filter and clog it up. So if i cant use sand because of the underground filter, should i use smooth pebbles that are around 1cm wide? or would that make my fish unhappy? Also, about the underground filter, should put a powerhead on the top or do it "reverse-flow" and attach a canister filter so that instead of sucking water down the gravel, it shoots it out? im afraid that the powerhead might scare the fish with its strongish currunt.
Ok, one more question. I know that bacteria grows in the tank and is useful for breaking down ammonia from fish waste but where does it actually stay? like does it stay in those cylinder ceramic thingies of a canister filter or does it stay on your gravel? or maybe even both. I just wanted to know this because when i am going to change my water and clean filter etc. i want to know if i should clean this or that because my friend like cleans his whole tank even the rocks and all and i was wondering if that like cleans away the bateria too
thanks in advance for any help^^
~Rhykiru
ps.i might not reply for like a day or something because i have two projects to do T_T
Edit:btw, i plan to use fake plants only so the underground filter wont mess with the roots
i plan to keep pearl gouramis(wanted blue rams but cant find any anywhere D neon tetras, and pygmy Corys
my tank dimensions are 30x12x19 inches. I heard that you should use the general rule of 1 inche of fish per one gallon so i would be able to keep 29 inches of fish. But, i read in like 3 fish keeping books that it really dependes on your surface area. It said that the inches of fish your tank could hold depended on the LxW of your tank divided by 10 and 30*12/10 is 36 inches of fish. Which one is more accurate? i dont know how much of each fish i want yet because i still dont know my max capacity :3
ok, another question about my gravel and filter. I heard that i should get sand for my Corys but then i also wanted an underground filter. The problem with that is that then, the sand would get in the filter and clog it up. So if i cant use sand because of the underground filter, should i use smooth pebbles that are around 1cm wide? or would that make my fish unhappy? Also, about the underground filter, should put a powerhead on the top or do it "reverse-flow" and attach a canister filter so that instead of sucking water down the gravel, it shoots it out? im afraid that the powerhead might scare the fish with its strongish currunt.
Ok, one more question. I know that bacteria grows in the tank and is useful for breaking down ammonia from fish waste but where does it actually stay? like does it stay in those cylinder ceramic thingies of a canister filter or does it stay on your gravel? or maybe even both. I just wanted to know this because when i am going to change my water and clean filter etc. i want to know if i should clean this or that because my friend like cleans his whole tank even the rocks and all and i was wondering if that like cleans away the bateria too
thanks in advance for any help^^
~Rhykiru
ps.i might not reply for like a day or something because i have two projects to do T_T
Edit:btw, i plan to use fake plants only so the underground filter wont mess with the roots