I'm the new guy
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- Sep 26, 2012
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I have a ten gallon aquarium with the following fish in it: 3 albino corys, 2 Lyre-tail mollies, and 1 otto. The tank is planted well with several live plants and a couple fake plants. The total inches of my fish at their current sizes total 16 inches. I also have a lot of river rocks in the aquarium. With the river rocks and gravel my tank only holds roughly 8 gallons of water if that. This tank totally defies the one inch per gallon rule. Not to mention that most people think mollies cannot be kept in under 20 gallon of water, but that's beside the point that i'm trying to make. The point is the the common rule that says one inch of fish can be kept for every gallon of water is not only incorrect, but it isn't even reasonable. Most of you know the one inch rule isn't perfectly accurate, but it is way off. My tank is well established, it's been stocked for over a year. The fish are thriving. In my opinion you overcome the one inch rule with a few principles. First you must have a good filter. I have a power filter rated for a 25 gallon aquarium.Secondly you must do frequent water changes. I change my water 5 times during a two week period. Every time I change 3 gallons of water. The third reason is the live plants. Live plants help the water quality of your tank tremendously. Before I started growing live plants in my tank the water was in much worse condition. This is my first post. I would love to learn what most of you think about my statements. I also have a poll up about the one inch rule if you want to be a part of that. Thanks for reading.