Depends on what you're housing in the tank. Freshwater aquarium to within 1 inch of the top of the tank. Turtles, about 1/2 to 3/4 full with surface outside the tank for the turtles to be out of the water and get warm (so needs a warming light, too.)
length and width for a 55 gallon fish tank
no its not.......because they get really big.. < ------ who ever wrote that is so wrong if its tall its small, if it long its good enough if you get it really big thy might get lost and die frm the stress its happened to people i know they buy the biggest tank the can when the snake is young.
A 55 gallon fish tank will be able to give rise to thousands of fish.
1 for like 5 months or so it will grow too big in about a year
A 150 watt bulb should do the trick. A bearded dragon needs about 95F to 105F in the basking spot and 75F to 85F in the cool end of the tank.
it is about 55 litlers
Pet stores, like Petco and PetSmart, sell 55 gallon fish tanks. One of these tanks can also be purchased used at yard sales or on eBay. It is risky to buy a used 55 gallon fish tank, though, because it is possible for it to have indiscernible cracks and leaks.
this Xmas moss-Aquarium Fish Tank 55 75 90 100 125 Gallon A1 can hold gallons of water.....
Calculating how many fish is often decided by what is called the 1 inch per gallon rule i.e. you could have 55 fish of 1 inch long fully mature. However there are many variables inlcuding filtration, surface area of tank, the species you get and how messy that species is. The best way to decide is to discuss it with a aquarium store owner (not large stores such as pets@home etc as they have terrible knowledge of species and fishkeeping in general.
i'v tryed puttting male betta's with other fish and never turn out well (death) and don't put them together but the females do fine with other fish and get along with each other
55 ltrs (1997 323 hatch)
If you are going with freshwater tropical, it you could add 55 inches of fish. Goldfish, on the other hand need 2-3 gallons per inch, about 22 inches of goldfish.