An
aquarium (plural
aquariums or
aquaria) is a
vivarium consisting
of at least one
transparent
side in which
water-dwelling
plants or
animals are kept.
Fishkeepers use aquaria to keep
fish,
invertebrates,
amphibians,
marine mammals,
turtles,
and aquatic plants. The term combines the Latin root
aqua,
meaning water, with the suffix
-arium, meaning "a place
for relating to".
An
aquarist owns fish or maintains an aquarium,
typically constructed of
glass or
high-strength
plastic.
Cuboid aquaria are also known as fish tanks or simply
tanks, while
bowl-shaped aquaria are
also known as fish bowls. Size can range from a small glass bowl to
immense
public aquaria. Specialised
equipment maintains appropriate water quality and other
characteristics suitable for the aquarium's residents.
History and popularization
In the
Roman Empire, the first fish to
be brought indoors was the
sea barbel,
which was kept under guest beds in small tanks made of marble.
Introduction of glass panes around the year 50 allowed Romans to
replace one wall of marble tanks, improving their view of the fish.
In 1369, the
Chinese Emperor,
Hóngwǔ, established a
porcelain company that produced large porcelain
tubs for maintaining
goldfish; over time,
people produced tubs that approached the shape of modern fish
bowls. Leonhard Baldner, who wrote
Vogel-, Fisch- und
Tierbuch (Bird, Fish, and Animal Book) in 1666, maintained
weather loaches and
newts.
In 1836, soon after his invention of the
Wardian case, Ward proposed to use his tanks
for tropical animals. In 1841 he did so, though only with aquatic
plants and toy fish. However, he soon housed real animals. In 1838,
Félix Dujardin noted owning a
saltwater aquarium, though he did
not use the term. In 1846, Anna Thynne maintained
stony corals and
seaweed
for almost three years, and was credited as the creator of the
first balanced marine aquarium in London. At about the same time,
Robert Warington experimented with a 13-gallon container, which
contained goldfish,
eelgrass, and
snails, creating one of the first stable
aquaria. He published his findings in 1850 in the
Chemical Society's journal.
The keeping of fish in an aquarium became a popular hobby and
spread quickly. In the United Kingdom, it became popular after
ornate aquaria in cast iron frames were featured at the
Great Exhibition of 1851.
In 1853, the first
large public aquarium opened in the London Zoo
and came to be known as the Fish House.
Philip Henry Gosse was the first
person to actually use the word "aquarium", opting for this term
(instead of "vivarium") in 1854 in his book
The Aquarium: An
Unveiling of the Wonders of the Deep Sea. In this book, Gosse
primarily discussed saltwater aquaria. In the 1850s, the aquarium
became a fad in the United Kingdom.

"What an Aquarium Should Be" - an 1876
British engraving
Germans soon rivaled the British in their interest. In 1854, an
anonymous author had two articles published about the saltwater
aquaria of the United Kingdom:
Die Gartenlaube (The Garden
House) entitled
Der Ocean auf dem Tische (The Ocean on the
Table). However, in 1856,
Der See im Glase (The Lake in a
Glass) was published, discussing freshwater aquaria, which were
much easier to maintain in landlocked areas. During the 1870s, some
of the first
aquarist societies
were appearing in Germany. The United States soon followed.
Published in 1858, Henry D. Butler's
The Family Aquarium
was one of the first books written in the United States solely
about the aquarium. According to the July issue of
The North
American Review of the same year, William Stimson may have
owned some of the first functional aquaria, and had as many as
seven or eight.
The first aquarist society in the United
States was founded in New York City
in 1893, followed by others. The
New
York Aquarium Journal, first published in October 1876, is
considered to be the world's first aquarium magazine.
In the
Victorian era in the United Kingdom
, a common design for the home aquarium was a glass
front with the other sides made of wood (made watertight with a
pitch coating). The bottom
would be made of
slate and heated from below.
More advanced systems soon began to be introduced, along with tanks
of glass in metal frames. During the latter half of the 19th
century, a variety of aquarium designs were explored, such as
hanging the aquarium on a wall, mounting it as part of a
window, or even combining it with a
birdcage.
Aquaria became more widely popular as houses had an electricity
supply after
World War I.
Electricity allowed artificial lighting as well
as
aeration,
filtration, and heating of the water. Initially,
amateur aquarists kept native fish (with the exception of
goldfish); the availability of exotic species from overseas further
increased the popularity of the aquarium. Jugs made from a variety
of materials were used to import fish from overseas, with a
bicycle foot pump for aeration. Plastic
shipping bags were introduced in the 1950s, making it easier to
ship fish. The eventual availability of air freight, allowed fish
to be successfully imported from distant regions. In the 1960s
metal frames made
marine aquaria
almost impossible due to corrosion, but the development of
tar and
silicone sealant allowed
the first all-glass aquaria made by Martin Horowitz in Los Angeles,
CA. The frames remained, however, though purely for aesthetic
reasons.
There are now around 60 million aquarists worldwide. In the United
States, aquarium keeping is the second-most popular hobby after
stamp collecting. In 1999 it was
estimated that over nine million U.S. households own an aquarium.
Figures from the 2005/2006 APPMA National Pet Owners Survey report
that Americans own approximately 139 million freshwater fish and
9.6 million saltwater fish. Estimates of the numbers of fish kept
in aquaria in Germany suggest at least 36 million. The hobby has
the strongest following in Europe, Asia, and North America. In the
United States, 40 percent of aquarists maintain two or more
tanks.
Design

An 80 liter home aquarium
Materials
Most aquaria consist of
glass panes bonded
together by
silicone, with plastic frames
that are attached to the upper and lower edges for decoration. The
glass aquarium is standard for sizes up to about 1000
litres (250
gal). However,
glass is brittle and has very little give before fracturing, though
generally the sealant fails first. Aquaria come in a variety of
shapes such as
cuboid,
hexagonal, angled to fit in a corner
(L-shaped), bow-front (the front side curves outwards). Fish bowls
are generally either plastic or glass, either spherical or some
other round configuration.
Acrylic aquaria are also
available and are the primary competitor with glass. Acrylic
aquariums are stronger than glass, and much lighter.
Acrylic-soluble cements are used to directly fuse acrylic together
(as opposed to simply sealing the seam). Acrylic allows for the
formation of unusual shapes, such as hexagonal. Compared to glass,
acrylics are easy to scratch; but it is possible to polish out
scratches in acrylic, unlike glass.
Laminated glass might be used, which
combines the advantages of both glass and acrylic.
Large aquaria might use stronger materials such as
fiberglass-reinforced
plastics. However, this material is not transparent.
Reinforced
concrete is used for aquaria
where weight and space are not factors. Concrete must be coated
with a waterproof layer to prevent the water from breaking down the
concrete as well as prevent contamination from the concrete.
Styles
Aquariums have been fashioned into coffee tables, sinks, and even
toilets. Another such example is the
MacQuarium, an aquarium made from the shell of an
Apple Macintosh computer.
A kreisel tank is a
circular aquarium
designed to hold delicate animals such as
jellyfish. These aquariums provide slow, circular
water flow with a lack of physical objects. Originally a German
design (
kreisel means spinning top), the tank has no sharp
corners, and keeps the housed animals away from the
plumbing. Water moving into the tank gives a gentle
flow that keeps the inhabitants suspended, and water leaving the
tank is covered by a delicate screen that prevents the inhabitants
from getting stuck. There are several types of kreisel tanks. In a
true kreisel, a circular tank has a circular, submerged lid.
Pseudokreisels have a curved bottom surface and a flat top surface,
similar to the shape of either a "U" or a
semicircle. Stretch kreisels or Langmuir kreisels
are a "double gyre" kreisel design, where the tank length is at
least twice the height. Using two downwelling inlets on both sides
of the tank lets gravity create two gyres in the tank. A single
downwelling inlet may be used in the middle as well. The top of a
stretch kreisel may be open or closed with a lid. There may also be
screens about midway down the sides of the tank, or at the top on
the sides. It is possible to combine these designs; a circular
shaped tank is used without a lid or cover, and the surface of the
water acts as the continuation of circular flow. It is now possible
to start a jellyfish aquarium at home as easily as a regular fish
tank.
Aquarium size and volume
An aquarium can range from a small glass bowl containing less than
a
litre (34
fl.oz.) of water to immense public aquaria that
house entire ecosystems such as
kelp
forests. Relatively large home aquaria resist rapid
fluctuations of temperature and
pH, allowing for
greater system stability.
Unfiltered bowl-shaped aquaria are now widely regarded as
unsuitable for most fish. Advanced alternatives are now available.
Aquariums should contain three forms of filtration: biological,
mechanical and chemical to keep water conditions at suitable
levels.
Reef aquaria under 100 litres (20 gal) have a special
place in the aquarium hobby; these aquaria, termed
nano reefs (when used in reefkeeping), have a
small water volume. .
Practical limitations, most notably the
weight (one litre of fresh water has a mass of
1 kilogram ( gal
−1), and salt water is even denser)
and internal
water pressure
(requiring thick glass siding) of a large aquarium, keep most home
aquaria to a maximum of around 1 cubic metre in volume ( or ). Some
aquarists, however, have constructed aquaria of many thousands of
litres.
Public aquariums designed for
exhibition of large species or environments can be dramatically
larger than any home aquarium.
The Georgia Aquarium
, for example, features an individual aquarium of
.
Components
The typical hobbyist aquarium includes a filtration system, an
artificial lighting system, and a heater or chiller depending on
the aquarium's inhabitants. Many aquaria incorporate a hood, to
decrease evaporation and prevent fish from leaving the aquarium
(and anything else from entering the aquarium). They also often
hold lights.
Combined biological and mechanical aquarium
filtration systems are common. These
either convert ammonia to nitrate (removing nitrogen at the expense
of aquatic plants), or to sometimes remove
phosphate. Filter media can house
microbes that mediate
nitration. Filtration systems are the most complex
component of home aquaria.
Aquarium heater combine a heating
element with a
thermostat, allowing the
aquarist to regulate water temperature at a level above that of the
surrounding air, whereas coolers and chillers (refrigeration
devices) are for use anywhere, such as cold water aquaria, that the
ambient room temperature is above the desired tank temperature.
Thermometers used include glass alcohol
thermometers, adhesive external plastic strip thermometers, and
battery-powered LCD thermometers. In addition, some aquarists use
air pumps attached to
airstones or water
pumps to increase water circulation and supply adequate gas
exchange at the water surface. Wave-making devices have also been
constructed to provide wave action.
An aquarium's physical characteristics form another aspect of
aquarium design. Size, lighting conditions, density of floating and
rooted plants, placement of
bog-wood,
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 survival of tank inhabitants.
An aquarium can be placed on an aquarium stand. Because of the
weight of the aquarium, a stand must be strong as well as level. A
tank that is not level may distort, leak, or crack. These are often
built with cabinets to allow storage, available in many styles to
match room
decor. Simple metal tank stands are
also available. Most aquaria should be placed on
polystyrene to cushion any irregularities on the
underlying surface or the bottom of the tank itself. However, some
tanks have an underframe making this unnecessary: the manual should
state if this is the case.
Aquarium maintenance
Large volumes of water enable more stability in a tank by diluting
effects from death or contamination events that push an aquarium
away from equilibrium. The bigger the tank, the easier such a
systemic shock is to absorb, because
the effects of that event are diluted. For example, the death of
the only fish in a three U.S. gallon tank (11 L) causes
dramatic changes in the system, while the death of that same fish
in a 100 U.S. gallon (400 L) tank with many other fish in
it represents only a minor change. For this reason, hobbyists often
favor larger tanks, as they require less attention.
Several
nutrient cycles are important
in the aquarium. Dissolved oxygen enters the system at the surface
water-air interface or via 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 enough to keep these other nutrient cycles in approximate
equilibrium.
Water conditions
The
solute content of water is perhaps the
most important aspect of water conditions, as
total dissolved solids and other
constituents dramatically impact basic water chemistry, and
therefore how organisms interact with their environment. Salt
content, or
salinity, is the most basic
measure of water conditions. An aquarium may have
freshwater (salinity below 500 parts per
million), simulating a lake or river environment;
brackish water (a salt level of 500 to
30,000 PPM), simulating environments lying between fresh and
salt, such as
estuaries; and salt water or
seawater (a salt level of 30,000 to
40,000 PPM), simulating an ocean environment. Rarely, higher
salt concentrations are maintained in specialized tanks for raising
brine organisms.
Saltwater is typically alkaline, while the
pH
(
alkalinity or
acidicity)
of fresh water varies more. Hardness measures overall dissolved
mineral content;
hard or soft water may
be preferred. Hard water is usually alkaline, while soft water is
usually neutral to acidic.
Dissolved organic content and
dissolved gases content are also important factors.
Home aquarists typically use tap water supplied through their local
water supply network to fill
their tanks. Straight tap water cannot be used in countries that
pipe chlorinated water. In the past, it was possible to "condition"
the water by simply letting the water stand for a day or two, which
allows the
chlorine time to dissipate.
However,
chloramine is now used more
often and does not leave the water as readily. Additives formulated
to remove chlorine or chloramine are often all that is needed to
make the water ready for aquarium use. Brackish or saltwater
aquaria require the addition of a commercially available mixture of
salts and other minerals.
More sophisticated aquarists modify water's alkalinity, hardness,
or dissolved content of organics and gases, before adding it to
their aquaria. This can be accomplished by additives, such as
sodium bicarbonate, to raise pH. Some aquarists
filter or purify their water prior to using it.
The two processes are
deionization or
reverse osmosis. In contrast, public
aquaria with large water needs often locate themselves near a
natural water source (such as a river, lake, or ocean) to reduce
the level of treatment.
Water
temperature determines the two
most basic aquarium classifications:
tropical vs.
cold
water. Most fish and plant species tolerate only a limited
temperature range: Tropical aquaria, with an average temperature of
about , are much more common. Cold water aquaria are for fish that
are better suited to a cooler environment. More important than the
range is consistency; most organisms are not accustomed to sudden
changes in temperatures, which can cause shock and lead to disease.
Water temperature can be regulated with a
thermostat and heater (or cooler).
Water movement can also be important in simulating a natural
ecosystem. Aquarists may prefer anything from still water up to
swift
currents, depending on the
aquarium's inhabitants. Water movement can be controlled via
aeration from air pumps, powerheads, and careful design of internal
water flow (such as location of filtration system points of inflow
and outflow).
Nitrogen cycle
Of primary concern to the aquarist is management of the
waste produced by an aquarium's inhabitants. Fish,
invertebrates,
fungi, and some bacteria
excrete
nitrogen waste in the form of
ammonia (which converts to
ammonium, in acidic water) and 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.
The process
A well-balanced tank contains organisms that are able to
metabolize the waste products of other aquarium
residents. This process is known in the aquarium hobby as the
nitrogen cycle.
Bacteria known as
nitrifiers (genus
Nitrosomonas) metabolize nitrogen waste.
Nitrifying bacteria capture ammonia from the water and metabolize
it to produce
nitrite. Nitrite is toxic to
fish in high concentrations. Another type of bacteria, genus
Nitrospira, converts nitrite into
nitrate, a less toxic substance. (
Nitrobacter bacteria were previously
believed to fill this role. 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.) Commercial products sold as kits to "jump start" the
nitrogen cycle, often still contain Nitrobacter.
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 that decays more slowly
than ammonia-driven
plankton already
dissolved in the water.
Maintaining the nitrogen cycle
What hobbyists call the nitrogen cycle is only a portion of the
complete 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 become bound
in the biomass of plants. The aquarium keeper must remove water
once nitrate concentrations grow, or remove plants which have grown
from the nitrates.
Hobbyist aquaria often do not have sufficient bacteria populations
to adequately denitrify waste. This problem is most often addressed
through two
filtration solutions:
Activated carbon filters absorb
nitrogen compounds and other
toxins, while
biological filters provide a medium designed to enhance
bacterial colonization. Activated carbon
and other substances, such as ammonia absorbing resins, stop
working when their pores fill, so these components have to be
replaced regularly.
New aquaria often have problems associated with the nitrogen cycle
due to insufficient beneficial bacteria. Therefore fresh water has
to be matured before stocking them with fish. There are three basic
approaches to this: the "fishless cycle", the "silent cycle" and
"slow growth".
In a
fishless cycle, small amounts
of ammonia are added to an unpopulated tank to feed the bacteria.
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, allowing the necessary
bacterial populations time to develop. According to anecdotal
reports, the plants can consume nitrogenous waste so efficiently
that ammonia and nitrite level spikes seen in more traditional
cycling methods are greatly reduced or disappear. "Slow growth"
entails slowly increasing the population of fish over a period of 6
to 8 weeks, giving bacteria colonies time to grow and stabilize
with the increase in fish waste.
The largest bacterial populations are found in the filter;
efficient filtration is vital. Sometimes, a vigorous cleaning of
the filter is enough to seriously disturb the biological balance of
an aquarium. Therefore, it is recommended to rinse mechanical
filters in an outside bucket of aquarium water to dislodge organic
materials that contribute to nitrate problems, while preserving
bacteria populations. Another safe practice consists of cleaning
only half of the filter media during each service.
Biological loading
Biological load is a measure of the burden placed on the aquarium
ecosystem by its inhabitants. High biological loading presents a
more complicated tank ecology, which in turn means that equilibrium
is easier to upset. Several fundamental constraints on biological
loading depend on aquarium size. The water's
surface area limits
oxygen intake. The bacteria population
depends on the physical space they have available to colonize.
Physically, only a limited size and number of plants and animals
can fit into an aquarium while still providing room for movement.
Biologically, biological loading refers to the rate of biological
decay in proportion to tank volume.
Calculating capacity
Limiting factors include the oxygen
availability and filtration processing. Aquarists have
rules of thumb to
estimate the number of fish that can be kept in an
aquarium; the examples below are for small freshwater fish, larger
freshwater fishes and most marine fishes need much more generous
allowances.
- 3 cm of adult fish
length per 4 litres of water (i.e., a
6 cm-long fish would need about 8 litres of water).
- 1 cm of adult fish
length per 30 square
centimetres of surface area.
- 1 inch of adult fish length
per gallon of water.
- 1 inch of adult fish length
per 12 square inches of surface
area.
Experienced aquarists warn against applying these rules too
strictly because they do not consider other important issues such
as growth rate, activity level, social behaviour, surface area of
plant life, and so on. Establishing maximum capacity is often a
matter of slowly adding fish and monitoring water quality over
time, following a
trial and error
approach.
Other factors affecting capacity
One variable is differences between fish. Smaller fish consume more
oxygen per gram of body weight than larger fish.
Labyrinth fish can breathe atmospheric oxygen
and do not need as much surface area (however, some of these fish
are territorial, and do not appreciate crowding).
Barb also require more surface area than
tetras of comparable size.
Oxygen exchange at the surface is an important constraint, and thus
the surface area of the aquarium matters. Some aquarists claim that
a deeper aquarium holds no more fish than a shallower aquarium with
the same surface area. The capacity can be improved by surface
movement and water circulation such as through aeration, which not
only improves oxygen exchange, but also waste decomposition
rates.
Waste density is another variable. Decomposition in solution
consumes oxygen. Oxygen dissolves less readily in warmer water;
this is a double-edged sword since warmer temperatures make fish
more active, so they consume more oxygen.
In addition to bioload/chemical considerations, aquarists also
consider the mutual compatibility of the fish. For instance,
predatory fish are usually not kept with small, passive species,
and territorial fish are often unsuitable tankmates for shoaling
species. Furthermore, fish tend to fare better if given tanks
conducive to their size. That is, large fish need large tanks and
small fish can do well in smaller tanks. Lastly, the tank can
become overcrowded without being overstocked. In other words, the
aquarium can be suitable with regard to filtration capacity, oxygen
load, and water, yet still be so crowded that the inhabitants are
uncomfortable.
Aquarium classifications

A planted freshwater aquarium
From the outdoor ponds and glass jars of antiquity, modern aquaria
have evolved into a wide range of specialized systems. Individual
aquaria can vary in size from a small bowl large enough for only a
single small fish, to the huge public aquaria that can simulate
entire marine
ecosystems.
One way to classify aquaria is by salinity.
Freshwater aquaria are the most popular
due to their lower cost. More epensive and complex equipment is
required to set up and maintain a
marine
aquaria. Marine aquaria frequently feature a diverse range of
invertebrates in addition to species of
fish.
Brackish water aquaria
combine elements of both marine and freshwater fishkeeping. Fish
kept in brackish water aquaria generally come from habitats with
varying salinity, such as
mangroves and
estuaries. Subtypes exist within these
types, such as the
reef aquarium, a
typically smaller marine aquarium that houses
coral.
Another classification is by
temperature
range. Many aquarists choose a
tropical
aquarium because tropical fish tend to be more colorful.
However, the
coldwater aquarium is
also popular, which may include fish such as
goldfish.
Aquaria may be grouped by their species selection. The
community tank is the most common today,
where several non-aggressive species live peacefully. In these
aquaria, the fish,
invertebrates, and
plants probably do not originate from
the same geographic region, but tolerate similar water conditions.
Aggressive tanks, in contrast, house a limited number of species
that can be aggressive toward other fish, or are able to withstand
aggression well. Specimen tanks usually only house one fish
species, along with plants, perhaps found in the fishes' natural
environment and decorations simulating a natural ecosystem. This
type is useful for fish that cannot coexist with other fish, such
as the
electric eel, as an extreme
example. Some tanks of this sort are used simply to house adults
for breeding.
Ecotype, ecotope, or
biotope aquaria is
another type based on species selection. In it, an aquarist
attempts to simulate a specific natural ecosystem, assembling fish,
invertebrate species, plants, decorations and water conditions all
found in that ecosystem. These biotope aquaria are the most
sophisticated hobby aquaria; public aquaria use this approach
whenever possible. This approach best simulates the experience of
observing in the wild. It typically serves as the healthiest
possible artificial environment for the tank's occupants.
Public aquaria
Most public aquarium facilities feature a number of smaller
aquaria, as well those too large for home aquarists. The largest
tanks hold millions of gallons of water and can house large
species, including
sharks or
beluga whales.
Dolphinaria are specifically for dolphins.
Aquatic and semiaquatic animals, including
otters and
penguins, may also
be kept by public aquaria. Public aquaria may also be included in
larger establishments such as a
marine mammal park or a
marine park.
Virtual aquariums
A virtual aquarium is a
computer
program which uses
3D graphics to
reproduce an aquarium on a
personal
computer. The swimming fish are
rendered in
real time, while the
background of the tank is usually static. Objects
on the floor of the tank may be mapped in simple
plane so that the fish may appear to swim
both in front and behind them, but a relatively simple 3D map of
the general shape of such objects may be used to allow the light
and ripples on the surface of the water to cast realistic
shadows. Bubbles and water noises are common for
virtual aquariums, which are often used as
screensavers.
The number of each type of fish can usually be selected, often
including other animals like
starfish,
jellyfish,
seahorses, and even
sea
turtles. Most companies that produce virtual aquarium software
also offer other types of fish for sale via Internet
download. Other objects found in an aquarium can
also be added and rearranged on some software, like
treasure chests and giant
clams that open and close with air bubbles, or a
bobbing
diver. There are also usually
features that allow the user to tap on the glass or put food in the
top, both of which the fish will react to. Some also have the
ability to allow the user to edit fish and other objects to create
new varieties.
See also
References
External links