- Aquarium is also the name of the Russian band, which is also spelled Akvarium
- Aquarium is also the name of an album by the
Danish pop-dance group Aqua
An aquarium (plural aquariums or aquaria) is a clear-sided container (typically constructed of glass or high-strength plastic) in which water-dwelling plants and animals (usually fish, and sometimes invertebrates, as well as amphibians, marine mammals, and reptiles) are
kept in captivity, often for public display; or it is an establishment featuring such displays. Aquarium keeping is a popular
hobby around the world, with about 60 million enthusiasts worldwide. From the 1850s, when the predecessor of the modern aquarium was first developed as a novel curiosity, the ranks of aquarists have swelled as more sophisticated systems including
lighting and filtration systems were developed to keep aquarium fish healthy. Public aquaria reproduce the home aquarist's hobby
on a grand scale — the Osaka Aquarium, for
example, boasts a tank of 5,400 m³ (1.4 million U.S. gallons) and a collection of about 580 species of aquatic life.
A wide variety of aquaria are now kept by hobbyists, ranging from a simple bowl housing a single fish to complex simulated
ecosystems with carefully engineered support systems. Aquaria are usually classified as containing fresh or salt water, at
tropical or cold water temperatures. These characteristics, and others,
determine the type of fish and other inhabitants that can survive and thrive in the aquarium. Inhabitants for aquaria are often
collected from the wild, although there is a growing list of organisms that are
bred in captivity for supply to the aquarium trade.
The careful aquarist dedicates considerable effort to maintaining a tank ecology
that mimics its inhabitants' natural habitat. Controlling water quality
includes managing the inflow and outflow of nutrients, most notably the management of waste produced by tank inhabitants. The nitrogen cycle
describes the flow of nitrogen from input via food, through toxic nitrogenous waste produced by tank inhabitants, to metabolism
to less toxic compounds by beneficial bacteria populations. Other components in
maintaining a suitable aquarium environment include appropriate species selection, management of biological loading, and good
physical design.
History and development
Ancient practices
The keeping of fish in confined or artificial environments is a practice with deep roots in history. Ancient Sumerians were known to keep wild-caught fish in ponds,
before preparing them for meals. In China, selective breeding of carp into today's popular koi and goldfish is believed to have begun over 2,000
years ago. Depictions of the sacred fish of Oxyrhyncus kept in captivity in
rectangular temple pools have been found in ancient Egyptian art. Many
other cultures also have a history of keeping fish for both functional and decorative purposes. The Chinese brought goldfish
indoors during the Song dynasty to enjoy them in large ceramic vessels.
Glass enclosures
The concept of an aquarium, designed for the observation of fish in an enclosed, transparent tank to be kept indoors, emerged
more recently. However, it is difficult to pinpoint the exact date of this development. In 1665 the diarist Samuel Pepys recorded seeing in London "a fine rarity, of fishes kept in a glass of water, that will live so forever, and
finely marked they are, being foreign". The fish observed by Pepys were likely to have been the paradise fish, Macropodus
opercularis, a familiar garden fish in Canton, China, where the
East India Company was then trading. In the
18th century, the biologist
Abraham Trembley kept hydra
found in the garden canals of the Bentinck residence 'Sorgvliet' in the Netherlands, in large cylindrical glass vessels for study. The concept of keeping aquatic life in glass
containers, then, dates to at latest this period.
Popularization
The keeping of fish in an aquarium first became a popular hobby in Britain only after
ornate aquaria in cast-iron frames were featured at the Great
Exhibition of 1851. The framed-glass aquarium was a specialized version of the glazed
Wardian case developed for British horticulturists in the 1830s to protect exotic plants on long sea voyages. (One feature of some 19th century aquaria that would prove curious to hobbyists today was the use of a
metal base panel so that the aquarium water could be heated by flame.) Germans rivaled
the British in their interest, and by the turn of the century Hamburg became the European port of entry for many
newly-seen species. Aquaria became more widely popular as houses became almost universally electrified after World War I. With electricity
great improvements were made in aquarium technology, allowing artificial lighting as well as the aeration, filtration, and
heating of the water. Popularization was also assisted by the availability of air freight, which allowed a much wider variety of
fish to be successfully imported from distant regions of origin that consequently attracted new hobbyists.
There are currently estimated to be about 60 million aquarium hobbyists worldwide, and many more aquaria kept by them. The
hobby has the strongest following in Europe, Asia, and North America. In the United States, a large minority
(40%) of aquarists maintain two or more tanks at any one time.
Function and design
From the outdoor ponds and glass jars of antiquity, modern aquaria have evolved into a wide range of specialized systems.
Aquaria can vary in size from a small bowl large enough for a single small fish, to the huge public aquaria that can simulate
entire marine ecosystems. The most successful aquaria, as judged by the long-term
survivability of its inhabitants, carefully emulate the natural environments that their residents would occupy in the wild.
Freshwater aquaria remain the most popular due to their lower cost and easier maintenance, but marine (saltwater) aquaria have gained cachet as dedicated enthusiasts
prove it is possible to preserve these challenging environments.
Design
The common freshwater aquarium maintained by a home aquarist typically includes a filtration system, an artificial lighting
system, air pumps, and a heater. In addition, some freshwater tanks (and most saltwater tanks) use powerheads to increase water
circulation.
Combined biological and mechanical filtration systems are now common; these are designed to remove potentially dangerous
build-up of nitrogenous wastes and phosphates dissolved in the water, as well as
particulate matter. Filtration systems are the most complexly engineered component of most home aquaria, and various designs are
used. Most systems use pumps to remove a small portion of the tank's water to an external pathway where filtration occurs; the
filtered water is then returned to the aquarium. Protein skimmers, a
filtration device that removes proteins and other waste from the water, are usually
found only in salt water aquaria.
Air pumps are employed to adequately oxygenate (or in the case of a heavily planted aquarium, provide carbon dioxide to) the
water. These devices, once universal, are now somewhat less commonly used as some newer filtration systems create enough surface
agitation to supply adequate gas exchange at the surface. Aquarium heaters are designed to act as thermostats to regulate water temperature at a level designated by the aquarist, when the prevailing
temperature of air surrounding the aquarium is below the desired water temperature. Coolers are also available for use in cold
water aquaria, or in parts of the world where the ambient room temperature is above the desired tank temperature.
An aquarium's physical characteristics form another aspect of aquarium design. Size, lighting conditions, density of floating
and rooted plants, placement of bogwood, creation of caves or overhangs, type of substrate, and other factors (including an aquarium's positioning within a room) can all affect the behavior and
survivability of tank inhabitants.
The combined function of these elements is to maintain appropriate water quality and characteristics suitable for the
aquarium's residents.
Classifications
Aquaria can be classified by several variables that determine the type of aquatic life that can be suitably housed. The
conditions and characteristics of the water contained in an aquarium are the most important classification criteria, as most
aquatic life will not survive even limited exposure to unsuitable water conditions. The size of an aquarium also limits the
aquarist in what types of ecosystems he can reproduce, species selection, and biological loading.
Water conditions
The dissolved content of water is perhaps the most important aspect of water conditions, as dissolved salts and other constituents can dramatically impact basic water chemistry, and therefore how organisms are
able to interact with their environment. Salt content, or salinity, is the most
basic classification of water conditions. An aquarium may have fresh water,
simulating a lake or river environment; salt water, simulating an ocean or sea
environment; or brackish water, simulating environments lying between
fresh and salt, such as estuaries.
Several other water characteristics result from dissolved contents of the water, and are important to the proper simulation of
natural environments. The pH of the water is a measure of alkalinity or acidity. Hardness measures overall dissolved mineral
content; soft or hard water
may be preferred. Dissolved organic content and
dissolved gases content are also important factors.
Home aquarists typically use modified tap water supplied through their local municipal water system to fill their tanks. For freshwater aquaria, additives formulated to remove
chlorine or chloramine (used to
disinfect drinking water supplies for human consumption) are often all that
is needed to make the water ready for aquarium use. Brackish or saltwater aquaria require the addition of a mixture of salts and
other minerals, which are commercially available for this purpose. More sophisticated aquarists may make other modifications to
their base water source to modify the water's alkalinity, hardness, or dissolved content of organics and gases, before adding it
to their aquaria. In contrast, public aquaria with large water needs often locate themselves near a natural water source (such as
a river, lake, or ocean) in order to have easy access to large volumes of water that does not require much further treatment.
Secondary water characteristics
Secondary water characteristics are also important to the success of an aquarium. The temperature of the water forms the basis of one of the two most basic aquarium classifications: tropical vs.
cold water. Most fish and plant species tolerate only a limited range of water temperatures: Tropical or warm water aquaria, with
an average temperature of about 25 °C (77 °F), are much more common and house most popular aquarium fish. Cold water aquaria are
those with temperatures below what would be considered tropical; a variety of fish are better suited to this cooler
environment.
Water movement can also be important in accurately simulating a natural ecosystem. Aquarists may prefer anything from still
water up to swift simulated currents in an aquarium, depending on
the conditions best suited for the aquarium's inhabitants.
Water temperature can be regulated with a combined thermometer/heater unit
(or, more rarely, with a cooling unit), while water movement can be controlled through the use of powerheads and careful design
of internal water flow (such as location of filtration system points of inflow and outflow).
Size
An aquarium can range from a small, unadorned glass bowl containing less than a liter of water - suitable for certain
air-breathing fish such as betta - to massive tanks built in public aquaria which are
limited only by engineering constraints and can house entire ecosystems as large as kelp forests or species of large sharks. In general, larger aquarium
systems are typically recommended to hobbyists due to their resistance to rapid fluctuations of temperature and pH, allowing for greater system stability.
Aquaria kept in homes by hobbyists can be as small as 3 U.S. gallons (11 L). This size is widely considered the smallest
practical system with filtration and other basic systems). They can be as large as to 300 US gallons (1100 L). Practical
limitations, most notably the weight (water weighs about 8 pounds per U.S. gallon (1
kg/L)) and internal water pressure (requiring thick, strong glass
siding) of a large aquarium, keep most home aquaria to a maximum of around 1 m³ (300 U.S. gallons). However, some dedicated
(perhaps obsessed) aquarists have been known to construct custom aquaria of up to several thousand US gallons (several cubic
metres), at great effort and expense.
Public aquaria designed for exhibition of large species or environments can be dramatically larger than any home aquarium. The
Shedd Aquarium features an individual aquarium of two million US
gallons (7,500 m³), as well as two others of 400,000 US gallons (1,500 m³). The Monterey Bay Aquarium has an acrylic viewing window into
their largest tank. At 56 feet long by 17 feet high (17 by 5 m), it is the largest window in the world and is over 13 inches (330
mm) thick. The size of public aquaria are usually limited by cost considerations.
Species selection
Several theories on species selection circulate within the community of hobby aquarists. Perhaps the most popular of these is
the division of aquaria into either a community or aggressive tank type. Community tanks house several species that
are not aggressive toward each other. This is the most common type of hobby aquarium kept today. Aggressive tanks, in contrast,
house a limited number of species that can be aggressive toward other fish, or are able to withstand aggression well. In both of
these tank types, the aquarium cohabitants may or may not originate from the same geographic region, but generally tolerate
similar water conditions. In addition to the fish, invertebrates, plants,
and decorations or "aquarium furniture" (all of which may or
may not be natural neighbors of any of the fish) are typically added to these tank types.
Species or specimen tanks usually only house one fish species, along with plants found in the fishes' natural
environment and decorations simulating a true ecosystem.
Ecotype or ecotope aquaria attempt to simulate a specific ecosystem found in the natural world, bringing
together fish, invertebrate species, and plants found in that ecosystem in a tank with water conditions and decorations designed
to simulate their natural environment. These ecotype aquaria might be considered the most sophisticated hobby aquaria; indeed,
reputable public aquaria all use this approach in their exhibits whenever possible. This approach best simulates the experience
of observing an aquarium's inhabitants in the wild, and also usually serves as the healthiest possible artificial environment for
the tank's occupants.
Species selection for saltwater aquaria
In addition to the types above, a special category of saltwater aquaria is the reef aquarium. These aquaria attempt to simulate the complex reef ecosystems found in warm, tropical oceans
around the world. These aquaria focus on the rich diversity of invertebrate life in these environments, and typically include
only a limited number of fish. Techniques of maintaining sea-anemones, some
corals, live rock, and crustacea, developed since the 1980s, have made
the recreations of a reef ecosystem possible. Reef aquaria are widely considered the most difficult and demanding of the common
hobbyist aquarium types.
Source of aquarium inhabitants
Fish and plants for the first modern aquaria were gathered from the wild and transported (usually by ship) to European and
American ports. During the early twentieth century many species
of small colorful tropical fish were caught and exported from Manaus Brazil, Bangkok Thailand, Siam, Jakarta Indonesia, the Dutch West
Indies, Calcutta India, and other
tropical ports. Collection of fish, plants, and invertebrates from the wild for supply to the aquarium trade continues today at
locations around the world. In many places of the world, impoverished local villagers collect specimens for the aquarium trade as
their prime means of income. It remains an important source for many species that have not been successfully bred in captivity,
and continues to introduce new species to enthusiastic aquarists.
The practice of collection in the wild for eventual display in aquaria has several disadvantages. Collecting expeditions can
be lengthy and costly, and are not always successful. The shipping process is very hazardous for the fish involved; mortality rates are high and many others are weakened by stress and become diseased upon arrival. Fish can also be injured during the collection process itself, most
notably during the process of using cyanide to stun reef fish to make them easier to
collect.
More recently, the potentially detrimental environmental impact of fish and plant collecting has come to the attention of
aquarists worldwide. These include the poisoning of coral reefs and non-target
species, the depletion of rare species from their natural habitat, and the degradation of ecosystems from large scale removal of
key species. Therefore, there has been a concerted movement by many concerned aquarists to reduce the trade's dependence on
wild-collected specimens through captive breeding programs. Among American keepers of marine aquaria surveyed in 1997, two thirds said
that they prefer to purchase farm raised coral instead of wild-collected coral, and over 80% think that only sustainably caught
or captively bred fish should be allowed for trade.
Since the 'fighting fish' Betta splendens was first
successfully bred in France in 1893, captive spawning techniques have been slowly
unravelled. Captive breeding for the aquarium trade is now concentrated in South Florida, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Bangkok, with smaller industries in Hawaii and Sri Lanka. Captive breeding programs of marine organisms for the aquarium
trade have been urgently in development since the mid-1990s. Breeding programs for
freshwater species are comparatively more advanced than for saltwater species.
Ecology
Ideal aquarium ecology reproduces the equilibrium found in nature in the closed system of an aquarium. In practice it is virtually impossible to
maintain a perfect balance. As an example, a balanced predator-prey relationship
is nearly impossible to maintain in even the largest of aquaria. Typically an aquarium keeper must take steps to maintain
equilibrium in the small ecosystem contained in his aquarium.
Approximate equilibrium is facilitated by large volumes of water. Any event that perturbs the system pushes an aquarium away
from equilibrium; the more water that is contained in a tank, the easier such a systemic shock is to absorb, as the effects of that event are diluted. For example, the death of the only
fish in a three US gallon tank (11 L) causes dramatic changes in the system, while the death of that same fish in a 100 US gallon
(400 L) tank with many other fish in it represents only a minor change in the balance of the tank. For this reason, hobbyists
often favor larger tanks when possible, as they are more stable systems requiring less intensive attention to the maintenance of
equilibrium.
Nitrogen cycle
Of primary concern to the aquarist is management of the biological waste produced by
an aquarium's inhabitants. Fish, invertebrates, fungi, and some bacteria excrete
nitrogen waste in the form of ammonia
(which may convert to ammonium, depending on water chemistry) which must then pass
through the nitrogen cycle. Ammonia is also produced through the
decomposition of plant and animal matter, including fecal matter and other detritus. Nitrogen waste products become
toxic to fish and other aquarium inhabitants at high concentrations.
A well-balanced tank contains organisms that are able to metabolize the
waste products of other aquarium residents. The nitrogen waste produced in a tank is metabolized in aquaria by a type of bacteria known as nitrifiers
(genus Nitrosomonas). Nitrifying bacteria capture ammonia from the water and metabolize it to produce nitrite. Nitrite is also highly toxic to fish in high concentrations. Another type of bacteria, genus
Nitrospira, converts nitrite into nitrate, a less toxic substance to aquarium
inhabitants. (Nitrobacter bacteria
were previously believed to fill this role, and continue to be found in commercially available products sold as kits to "jump
start" the nitrogen cycle in an aquarium. While biologically they could theoretically fill the same niche as Nitrospira, it has
recently been found that Nitrobacter are not present in detectable levels in established aquaria, while Nitrospira are
plentiful.) This process is known in the aquarium hobby as the nitrogen cycle.
In addition to bacteria, aquatic plants also eliminate nitrogen waste by metabolizing ammonia and nitrate. When plants
metabolize nitrogen compounds, they remove nitrogen from the water by using it to build biomass. However, this is only temporary, as the plants release nitrogen back into the water when older leaves die
off and decompose.
Although informally called the nitrogen cycle by hobbyists, it is in fact only a portion of a true cycle: nitrogen must be
added to the system (usually through food provided to the tank inhabitants), and nitrates accumulate in the water at the end of
the process (or contribute to a growth in biomass via plant metabolism). In practice, this accumulation of nitrates in home
aquaria requires the aquarium keeper to make periodic water changes, removing water from the tank that is high in nitrates and
replacing it with water low in nitrates.
Aquaria kept by hobbyists often do not have the requisite populations of bacteria needed to detoxify nitrogen waste from tank
inhabitants. This problem is most often addressed through two filtration
solutions: Activated carbon filters absorb nitrogen compounds and
other toxins from the water, while biological filters provide a medium specially
designed for colonization by the desired nitrifying
bacteria.
Cycling
New aquaria also do not usually have the required populations of bacteria for the handling of nitrogen waste. In a process
called cycling, aquarists cultivate these bacteria as fish and other producers of nitrogen waste are gradually added to
the tank over the course of several weeks. Aquarists use several different methods to jump start this process, including the use
of water additives containing small populations of the bacteria, or "seeding" a new tank with a mature bacterial colony removed
from another aquarium (such as can be found on gravel or biological filter media).
Other cycling methods that have gained popularity in recent years are the fishless cycle and the silent cycle.
As the name of the former implies, no fish are kept in a tank undergoing a fishless cycle. Instead, small amounts of ammonia are
added to the tank to feed the bacteria being cultured. During this process, ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate levels are tested to
monitor progress. The silent cycle is basically nothing more than densely stocking the aquarium with fast-growing aquatic plants
and relying on them to consume the nitrogen products rather than bacteria. According to anecdotal reports of aquarists
specializing in planted tanks, the plants can consume nitrogenous waste so efficiently that the spikes in ammonia and nitrite
levels normally seen in more traditional cycling methods are greatly reduced, if they are detectable at all.
Improperly cycled aquaria can quickly accumulate toxic concentrations of nitrogen waste and kill its inhabitants.
Other nutrient cycles
Nitrogen is not the only nutrient that cycles through an aquarium. Dissolved oxygen enters the system at the surface water-air
interface or through the actions of an air pump. Carbon dioxide escapes the system into the air. The phosphate cycle is an
important, although often overlooked, nutrient cycle. Sulfur, iron, and micronutrients also cycle through the system, entering as
food and exiting as waste. Appropriate handling of the nitrogen cycle, along with supplying an adequately balanced food supply
and considered biological loading, is usually enough to keep these other nutrient cycles in approximate equilibrium.
Biological loading
Biological loading is a measure of the burden placed on the aquarium ecosystem by its living inhabitants. High biological
loading in an aquarium represents a more complicated tank ecology, which in turn means that equilibrium is easier to perturb. In
addition, there are several fundamental constraints on biological loading based on the size of an aquarium. The surface area of water exposed to air limits dissolved oxygen intake by the tank. The capacity of nitrifying bacteria is limited by the physical space
they have available to colonize. Physically, only a limited size and number of plants and animals can be fit into an aquarium
while still providing room for movement.
In order to prevent biological overloading of the system, aquarists have developed a number of rules of thumb. Perhaps the most popular of these is the "one inch of fish per US gallon" rule, which
dictates that the sum in inches of the lengths of all fish kept in an aquarium (excluding tail length) should not exceed the
capacity of the tank measured in U.S. gallons (about 7 mm per liter of water).
The true maximum or ideal biological loading of a system is very difficult to calculate, even on a theoretical level. To do
so, the variables for waste production rate, nitrification efficiency, gas
exchange rate at the water surface, and many others would need to be determined. In practice this is a very complicated and
difficult task, and so most aquarists use rules of thumb combined with a trial and error approach to reach an appropriate level of biological loading.
Public aquaria
Public aquaria are facilities open to the public for viewing of aquatic species in aquaria. Most public aquaria feature a
number of smaller tanks, as well as one or more large tank greater in size than could be kept by any home aquarist. The largest
tanks hold millions of US gallons of water and can house large species, including dolphins, sharks or beluga
whales. Aquatic and semi-aquatic animals, including otters and penguins, may also be kept by public aquaria.
Operationally, a public aquarium is similar in many ways to a zoo or museum. A good aquarium will have special exhibits to entice repeat visitors, in addition to
its permanent collection. A few have their own version of a "petting zoo"; for instance, the Monterey Bay Aquarium has a shallow tank filled with common types
of rays, and one can reach in to feel their leathery skins as they pass
by.
Also as with zoos, aquaria usually have specialized research staff who study the habits and biology of their specimens. In
recent years, the large aquaria have been attempting to acquire and raise various species of open-ocean fish, and even jellyfish
(or sea-jellies, cnidaria), a difficult task since these creatures have never
before encountered solid surfaces like the walls of a tank, and do not have the instincts to turn aside from the walls instead of running into them.
The first public aquarium opened in London's Regent's Park, in 1853. P.T. Barnum quickly followed with the first American aquarium, opened on Broadway in New York. Following early examples of Detroit, New York
and San Francisco, many major cities now have
public aquaria. Most public aquaria are located close to the ocean, for a steady supply
of natural seawater. An inland pioneer was Chicago's Shedd Aquarium that received seawater shipped by rail in special tank cars.
In January 1985 Kelly Tarlton began construction of the first aquarium to include a
large transparent acrylic tunnel in Auckland, New Zealand, a task that took 10 months and cost NZ$3 million. The 110 metre tunnel was
built from one tonne slabs of German sheet plastic that were shaped locally in an oven. A moving walkway now transports visitors
through, and groups of school children occasionally hold sleepovers there beneath the swimming sharks and rays.
Top public aquaria are often affiliated with important oceanographic research institutions or conduct their own research
programs, and usually (though not always) specialize in species and ecosystems that can be found in local waters.
Notable public aquaria include:
- Aquarium of the
Bay (formerly UnderWater
World) (San Francisco, California)
- Barcelona Aquarium (http://www.aquariumbcn.com/) (Barcelona,
Spain)
- Birch Aquarium (California) (Affiliated with the Scripps Institute of Oceanography)
- The Deep (Kingston upon Hull, England, supposedly the world's first
'submarium')
- New England Aquarium (Boston, Massachusetts)
- Kelly Tarlton's (http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20050121014650517) (Auckland, New Zealand)
- Lisbon Oceanarium
(Lisbon, Portugal, Portugal)
- Monterey Bay Aquarium (California)
- Moody Gardens (Galveston)
- Mystic Aquarium
(Mystic, Connecticut)
- National Aquarium (Baltimore, Maryland)
- Newport Aquarium
(Newport, Kentucky)
- Ocean's Journey
(Denver, Colorado)
- Osaka Aquarium Kaiyukan (Osaka, Japan)
- Ripley's Aquarium, Myrtle Beach, South
Carolina
- Ripley's Aquarium of the Smokies, Gatlinburg,
Tennessee
- Shedd Aquarium (Chicago, Illinois)
- Sydney Aquarium
(New South Wales, Australia)
- Tennessee Aquarium
(Chattanooga, Tennessee)
- Two Oceans
Aquarium (South Africa)
- Underwater World at Sentosa Island (Singapore)
- Vancouver Aquarium
Marine Science Centre (Vancouver, Canada)
- Waikiki Aquarium
Saltwater aquarium
List of aquarium diseases
List of aquaria
Macquarium
Marine park
Terrarium
References
Internet references
Book references
- Scott, Peter W (1995). The Complete Aquarium. DK Publishing. ISBN 0789400138.
- Skomal, Gregory (1997). Setting up a Freshwater Aquarium: An Owner's Guide to a Happy Healthy Pet. New York: Wiley
Publishing. ISBN 0876055021.
External links
- The Krib.com (http://www.thekrib.com/) - The longest-running aquarium site on the Internet, with some
beginner's information but emphasizing advanced practice and opinion, especially of freshwater fishes and planted aquaria.
- The Skeptical
Aquarist (http://www.skepticalaquarist.com) - An excellent source of
information for aquarium hobbyists.
- Reef Central.com (http://www.reefcentral.com/) - The largest reef oriented web site on the Internet. Special
areas for beginners, advanced, 200+ US gallon systems, DIY pages and industry experts.
- Reefs.org (http://www.reefs.org) - An online interactive community dedicated to the education of marine
aquarists worldwide, established in 1997.
- WetWebMedia.com (http://www.wetwebmedia.com) - Maintained by Bob Fenner and other veteran aquarists, this site
provides answers to many FAQs about all types of aquariums and livestock.
- A World of Fish (http://www.aworldoffish.com)
- Myfishtank.net (http://www.myfishtank.net) A website with information about freshwater and saltwater
aquriums.
- Flash Wilson's fishkeeping
guides (http://www.gorge.org/fish/)
- Tropical Freshwater Aquarium
Fish (http://fish.mongabay.com/) A website with information about freshwater
tropical fish including biotope descriptions.
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