Yes, and almost any fish will not "stay small" in a small tank. Blue tangs need a very large space, as in many feet, to move in order to live for many years. It is generally recommended that a blue tang be placed in no smaller than a 75 gallon tank. Also, no tang can be kept in 30 gallons. Some alternatives to the open water nature of a tang would be a small group of blue reef Chromis (Chromis cyaneus).
Pacific Blue - 1996 Full Moon - 2.18 was released on: USA: 23 February 1997
The full gallon is a better deal financially. The unit price for the full gallon is 6.1% less than the unit price for the half-gallon.
A gallon is bigger
- You mean as opposed to an empty gallon ? - There are 8 pints in EVERY gallon
1 gallon = 4 quarts2.5 gallons = 10 quarts8.75/10 = 0.875 = 7/8 full or 87.5% full
1 US gallon = 128 fluid ounces
I had a five gallon Alhambra bottle full of silver coins only, it equaled $4,698.50
Easy. Fill the 7gal pail to the full mark (7 Gallons) with water. Then pour, from the 7 gallon pail, water into each of the 3 gallon pail up to the full mark. The remaining water left in the 7 gallon is 1 gallon. Pour this gallon into the aquarium. Fill the 7 gallon pail with water, again to the full mark, and then add to the aquarium. 1 Gallon + 7 Gallons = 8 Gallons.
It depends what's in the gallon. If the gallon is empty, it weighs zero. If it has air in it, it weighs a little bit. If it's full of water, it weighs about 8.4 pounds. If it's full of gold, it weighs about 160 pounds.
20 1 gallon = 4 quarts 1 quart = 0.25 gallon
1 gallon = 128 fluid ounces. It's impossible to say how many ounces of force a gallon weighs, since we don't know what the gallon is full of.
yeah it is appropriate if your snake still has room to move around in it