Coral Fish
Coral Fish make a great addition to your
coral reef aquarium, but they also need special care. Read on
if you are thinking of adding coral fish to your fish tank
...
For many people, coral fish are the ultimate way to brighten
up an otherwise drab home. There is no environment on earth as
teaming with bright, colorful, exotic life as the coral reefs
of the world, and so getting yourself coral fish helps you
capture some of that beauty and bring it back alive on to dry
land. Think about your living room, glowing with living flashes
of oranges, reds and blues, ducking along amongst patches of
light and shadow, weaving too and fro, and chasing each other
around the coral reef aquarium. This is what gets people so
hooked on coral reef fish. Unfortunately, it is not the whole
story.
There is no pet that is more temperamental, more expensive
to purchase and maintain (or at least to maintain) and more
likely to die well before its time despite your best effort,
than coral fish. The problem has many sources. One of them has
to do with the nature of the coral fish environment. They
naturally live in a place teaming with life. There are certain
predators which chase them, and certain things that they
instead feed on. There are other coral reef fish of the same
species swimming around, and they have to stake out territory
and find mates. There are various bacteria and other organisms,
as well as tides to keep the water consistently clean. Deprived
of even one of these many factors, coral fish tend not to do
nearly as well. And there is just simply no way for your
average coral fish owner to provide them with all of this.
Add to this some other problems too. For one thing, your
house has things in it that are not good for the fish. It is a
funny thing about contamination: no matter how carefully you
seek to avoid introducing it, it inevitably sneaks its way in
to the fishes environment. There are bacteria, molds, and
mildews, even in the most meticulously clean house, that will
sooner or later, find their way inside the coral fish tank,
where they can grow on the sides. And once your coral fish
catch one of these diseases, they will be dead before you have
even the slightest chance of figuring out what is going on with
them. There are things that you can do to try to protect your
coral fish from dying in this fashion, but all of them cost
money, and none of them are really a hundred percent
effective.
For more information about fish and aquariums, see the
"resources" section of this website, or go to articles about
aquarium fish.
|