Most Aquarist use this rule of thumb to put fish in an aquarium, 5 inches of adult fish for every gallon of water in the tank. The five inches only takes in the head and body. Do not use the tail in the measurement.
A 20 Gallon tank can hold up to 20 gallons of water.
A bit less than 75 US gallons.
1 gallon = 231 cubic inches Volume of the tank is (10 x 20 x 12) = 2,400 cubic inches The tank has a capacity of (2,400 / 231) = 10.39 gallons (rounded), but we have no way of knowing how many gallons are "in it".
Mine was 20 gallons. depends on the wheelbase the shorter will have a 23 gallon and the longer could have a 23 or 38 gallon tank
20 qts 1 gallon = 4 quarts 1 quart = 0.25 gallon
In that 150 gallon fish tank try to put fish and maintain it
If the temperature is around 20 degrees (Celcius) probably not. But for a five GALLON fish tank, probably.
A 20 Gallon tank can hold up to 20 gallons of water.
20 gallons for one fish and 10 gallon for each addition goldfish. See the related link for further information.
Betta fish, guppies, tetras.
No! It's not big enough you need a 10 gallon to 20 gallon tank or aquairuim for breeding and you need to be experienced for breeding. In short, no you can't try a 10 gallon tank or over that :) hope I helped
5 Gallons
Not a lot. A twenty gallon aquarium is too small for a 5" fish to begin with.
No, these fish can grow past 1.5 ft in length
weekly 10 - 20% water changes
10 qts 1 gallon = 4 quarts 1 quart = 0.25 gallon
either a 15 gallon tank or a 20 gallon tank