The biorb fish tank is made of glass or plexiglass like other fish tanks, except it has a ceramic filter inside so that when the fish uses the bathroom, it sucks it out quickly.
BiOrb aquariums can be purchased through Amazon and other online retailers. I am sure your local petshop would sell at least one variety of BiOrb aquariums.
Petco has them, so I'm sure Petsmart does as well. Amazon also has them. There is also an online store called Everything Biorb that has them, as well as a store Biorb Fish Tank, which is also online only.
I am not sure of the absolute mathematical sizing, but I can recommend my 4 gallon tank which I think is one of the more convenient sized ones. I have a 30cm by 30cm round fish tank made by BiOrb - it is a baby biorb.
The BiOrb retailers recommend at least 24 hours, and I would say definitley no less time than this. I was advised at 3 days, and I have now had 3 fish in my BiOrb for 2 weeks with no water or filtration problems.
I would imagine so reviews are often wrong, I was told for my baby biorb to get 1 betta fish. I have successfully cared for 2 angel fish, a molly, a pleco and currently a tropical parrot fish. I would be very surprised if a biorb could not support a newt.
Yes
me!
With or without a heater they are not suitable for keeping any kind of fish in. The 3 basic rules of fish keeping are :- 1 inch of fish needs a minimum of 1 gallon of water. :- every fish tank need a permanently running cycled filter. :- every fish tank needs to have at least 50% of its water replaced every week. If you follow the above three rulles you and your fish will stand a chance of success. If you fail in keeping them I can guarantee you will be constantly having problems and be buying replacement fish.
It can be put on the fish tank because it cant dissolve.
a good rule of thumb for stocking aquariums is one gallon for every inch of fish.
Glass. Or thick Plastic. Filled with water. Get smart -_-
Preferably neither, even if you went with the 35 L(which is the better choice) it'd still not be big enough to house 1 goldfish- let alone 3, regardless of the size. You can save yourself a lot of trouble, and heartache, if you just go with a bigger- more appropriately sized tank. If you go with the 35 L it is practically guaranteed that at least one of your fish will from ammonia poisoning. Do you really want to have to deal with dieing fish? go for a bigger tank.