Set Up

The only space I can put a fish tank is in a busy hallway and wanted to know if that is ok | Guide

A busy hallway can host a fish tank, but only with careful planning. This guide highlights risks to safety, stability, and comfort, vibrations, drafts, shadows, and spills, and offers a practical step by step plan to create a hallway aquarium that thrives well without compromising safety for pets and people.

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Why are my fish gasping at the water’s surface | Guide

Gasping at the surface signals oxygen problems or water issues. Stay calm and act quickly: boost surface agitation, add aeration, and perform a 30–50% dechlorinated water change. Stop feeding for 24 hours. Then test ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, and temperature; fix filtration, temperature, and bioload to restore safe oxygen levels today.

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Is there a dominance hierarchy amongst corals | Guide

Corals aren’t governed by a universal ladder; they compete through guilds and context. Success depends on space, light, flow, and nutrients, plus strategies like sweepers, digestive filaments, shading, and allelopathy. By zoning, spacing, and vigilant night checks, hobbyists create peaceful, thriving mixed reefs with resilient neighbors that keep corals harmonious.

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Why are most marine fish so territorial | Guide

Marine fish are famously territorial, an instinct shaped by crowded reefs and scarce resources. This guide explains why boundaries form, how aggression arises, and how aquariums can mirror space with clever rockwork, multiple havens, and varied feeding sites. With careful stocking and layout, peaceful, thriving reef and fish-only tanks emerge.

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Apart from the zooxanthellae, how else do corals feed | Guide

Corals rely on zooxanthellae, but many species also feed on plankton, dissolved nutrients, and microbes. They catch prey with tentacles, trap particles with mucus, and even digest externally. In aquariums, match particle size, time feeds, and balance nutrients with filtration for healthier, faster-growing, colorful corals through careful observation and adjustment.

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How does the partnership between algae and coral work | Guide

Coral reefs are living gardens built by corals and tiny algae living inside their cells. Light fuels energy for both, while nutrients recycle in a delicate loop. In tanks, mimicking light, flow, and steady chemistry keeps the partnership strong, supporting growth, color, and resilience against stress for reefs and homes.

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Why are so many marine fish so specialised in their diet | Guide

Marine fish are renowned for color and form, yet many species eat specialized diets. Generalists adapt, while specialists target copepods, sponges, coral polyps, or plankton. This guide explains why specialization arises, how it shapes reefs and tanks, and how to feed wisely without harming water quality for beginners and hobbyists.

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