What Not to Do When Starting a Fish Tank

Everyone who keeps tropical fish for longer than a few months makes mistakes early on that they wish they could tell their younger selves to avoid. I was six years old when I started keeping fish, and I made a lot of mistakes. In the hope that you will be able to avoid some of them, I present 10 of my worst mistakes here:

One: Not do research. When I was first starting out, most of my problems stemmed from this.

Two: Not do regular partial water changes. Because I hadn’t done number one, I didn’t realize that I was supposed to do this, or how one should do this.

Three: Put too many fish in the aquarium. This compounded problem two.

Four: Assume fish are short lived. A few fish, like annual killifishes, live only a few months in nature but a Corydoras catfish can live for up to seven years in captivity and a goldfish can reach 20 years of age. If you make this wrong assumption, you may not notice you are doing something wrong.

Five: Buy one of each species. Many fishes are schooling and do not do as well without the company of their own kind.

Six: Keep goldfish in a goldfish bowl. Common goldfish can grow up to 12 inches in length and produce large amounts of waste. They do not belong in goldfish bowls.

Seven: Started with too small a fish tank. A five gallon tank makes a perfectly good aquarium, but water parameters can change quickly and you can’t keep many fish in there.

Eight: Not feed bottom feeders sinking food and depend on one brand of flake food for everything. Corydoras catfish get hungry and don’t feed off the surface. Fish benefit from a varied diet just as we do.

Nine: Keeping a Betta in a community tank without a plan B or enough hiding places for fish to get away. It killed one of my Neon Tetras, so we put the Betta in a breeding trap that wasn’t really big enough for it.

Ten: Put a Pygmy Gourami in with Cherry Shrimp. Pygmy Gouramis may have small mouths, but they regard shrimp as food and that one fish harassed the shrimp unmercifully. If it hadn’t been for the extremely thick live plants I think I would probably have lost all my Cherry Shrimp.

The last one wasn’t all that long ago, so such mistakes aren’t limited to beginners. No matter how much you think you know, do your research! And if you possibly can, keep a spare tank for quarentine, hospital use and unexpected animosities.

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Elizabeth @ 7:18 am

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