Does tank size affect fish size?

Paul B

Well-Known Member
Do fish grow to the size of the tank?

There is so much debate on this topic that I was hesitant to start it because of all the arguements and furniture throwing I know it will start. (there are some forums I won't put this on)

The answer to the question is a definate, maybe, well, sometimes, kinda, yes, no, and I don't really know. We can try to research it and read through scientific studies to come to a definate answer. But scientific studies usually don't mean much with something that requires a lot of time because research projects don't last for many years. Especially something for a hobby called "Ornamental Fish Keeping". We really don't need ornamental fish so there isn't mush money going toward research.

I Googled it and it seems that "most" (but not all) of the answers say that tank size does not affect the growth of fish unless it is a goldfish. I guess goldfish have a lock on stunting their own growth to the size of their tank. Well, if goldfish can do it, why can't a moorish Idol or bluefin tuna?

To get the correct answer to this question I can only go by my own experiences as I have kept way more fish than I can count for the last 60 years. A good number of them I kept for 10, 15, or 20+ years. (I also killed more fish than Starkist Tuna)

Most of the literature you will find on this will state that fish are stunted because of either inadaquate water conditions, lack of the proper diet or poor health. I will admit that those things would most likely limit the size a fish would grow. But they are not the only things as I will "try" to explain later.

A fish needs to do three things, grow, spawn and have immunity to most of the pathogens it encounters in the sea. Remember that the water the fish is in is a continuation of it's circulatory system so anything that is in the water, could easily be in the fish. It's immune system is the only thing that keeps it safe.

Fish also have to spawn and do it constantly because a fish is an animal that never dies of old age, they are all eaten alive by something bigger. If a fish gets old and slow, it gets eaten by another fish, seal, bird or polar bear. We eat the rest of them. That is why fish have so many babies, to replace all that are lost.

For a fish to acomplish those 3 things it needs the correct foods and a lot of it. Its immune system alone requires an aweful lot of calories but not as much as reproduction. Fish constantly develop eggs and even if their is no male around, they produce eggs then they re absorb them and grow new ones. This takes an enormous amount of energy. Growth is the last thing a fish needs to do so it can mature enough to lay eggs and pass on it's genes. Out of those three things, growth uses the least amount of energy and calories because fish growth is much slower than those other two things.

Fish eggs can be a large proportion of the weight of the fish and fish can spawn every couple of weeks. The immune system constantly produces slime which is a large part of it's immune system because it's slime is infused with white blood cells and antibodies and antiparisitic chemicals to repel and kill offending organisms.

What does all this have to do with the original question? Good question.

Basically all of the answers you will find about "if fish become stunted by the size of the tank" will say that the reason is lack of proper diet, or less than perfect health.

I am saying that if the fish is spawning, immune from diseases, and fairly old, it is as healthy as it can be in a tank. So that, to me, indicates that if a fish is in a tank for a number of years, it is immune from disease and is spawning, that fish is healthy so if it's growth is stunted, it is not because of lack of health.

So why all the controversy and charts indicating what size tank we should have for certain fish? The answer is actually simple but the only way we can find out the answer is by keeping a variety of fish in a tank and see if they grow to the size they would in the sea.

I have done this with many fish, salt and fresh and I can answer with a fair amount of certainty that "It depends on the fish". That is the answer.

Some fish will continue to grow no matter what we do. For instance I have kept flounders, sea robins, remora's, arowana's, scats, and a variety of catfish over many years numbers of times. Those particular fish will outgrow whatever tank they are in, and will do it very fast. I had a remora that grew so fast I could almost hear it grow. It grew over a foot in a few months.

But, (and there is always a but) I have kept many other fish for decades and they never grew very much at all. I will give examples. A hippo tang I had for 7 or 9 years in a 40 gallon tank. He stayed about 4" long. I transfered him to a 6' long tank where he lived to about 12 years old and never got much over 5". That fish in the sea can get twice that size. I had a percula clown for 12 years and for most of those years he spawned. He grew to about 2". In the sea those guys get huge. I now have a fireclown. He is about 25 years old in my 100 gallon tank. He is about 3 1/2" and his 17 year old mate is about an inch shorter. That pair spawns about once a month. As I said, if a fish is spawning, that means it is healthy and it's water conditions are healthy so if the fish is not growing, something else has to be the cause. My copperband butterfly is a few years old and has been about 5" for the last couple of years. I think he is still growing, but very slowly.

Goldfish exude substances in a tank and even in a pond that limits their size. If you put a one inch goldfish in a fish bowl, in 10 years it will be almost the same size. But if you put that same fish in a lake, it will grow to a foot or more long.

Could it be possible that other fish can do the same thing?

I really don't know, but neither does anyone else. We can read all about tank sizes for particular fish but if you personally have kept that fish in a smaller tank for 20 years and the fish was healthy and spawning and it never got very big, why would you think it needed a larger tank?

Yes, of course fish should always be in a larger tank, preferably the ocean so virtually "all" the fish we keep should be in a bigger tank. I get that.

So Tang police (I know you will be all over this like stink on a two week old dead flounder) if someone wants to put "their" own fish, that "They" bought with "their" own money. It is "their" fish and can do with it what they want. I eat fish almost every day.

Tangs almost always live in a school so, if we put "any" tang in a tank, and if you are of the mindset that fish have feelings, it won't be happy no matter what size tank it is in. From my experience most tangs are the type of fish that can remain healthy and live in a smaller tank that is many times recommended, If that tang is small when we put it in the tank. "Some" types of Tangs, like all other fish should be in a larger tank. But this hobby sometimes, either because of finances or space, will not allow for a larger tank. If you would like to disagree, that is of course fine. But before you do, get a tang and put it in a smaller tank than is recommended, keep it healthy in that tank for 12 years, then disagree and at that time let us know what were the problems you had with that tang in that tank.

Of course you also need to keep the same type of tang in a larger tank and feed it the same thing for those 12 years.

I have done this so I have an opinion on it and it is not from reading it from Google.

Now there are the people that will say it is cruel. Remember before you go there, we are all keeping fish captive against their will. They will never contribute to the gene pool in the sea. They are all in a too small tank eating something they are not used to.

I would love to keep my fish in a 10,000 gallon tank, that is not going to happen. But I would love to do that as I want the best for my fish. All my paired fish are spawning so I know they are healthy and I assume happy. :cool:
 

MatroxD

Active Member
Nice write up.. I actually have a Mata tang in my 180 that recently, I have been thinking about.. When I purchased him last year, he was thin and about 3 inches. Now, he's fat, about 8-9 inches and beginning to get his forked tail..

I'm caught in a quandary about taking him to a local farm(tropicorium is about 10 minutes from me), and seeing if they will keep him in one of their vats.. They have I think they told me 2000 gallon vats that they keep their larger fish in for their own stock and collection.. If they would keep him, then I am sure he'd be happier in one of those. However, I know that that fish and all larger Tangs can eat and eat, and eat to no end. So they may not want that in their system, as they are already feeding massive sharks..

But this has been on my mind in the last few weeks..

Sent from my SM-N910V using Tapatalk
 

DaveK

Well-Known Member
Excellent post Paul.

This is one subject area where there is no definite answer.

Even so, I do recommend that people check the maximum size a fish will typically grow to in an aquarium, and plan for it in their systems.
 

Paul B

Well-Known Member
It certainly has no answer as all fish are different. I have many times given fish to the New York Aquarium or others when they got to large. Porcupine puffers are another fish that continue to grow.
I collected this little half inch burrfish in the sea and I put him in a 5 gallon tank. He kept growing so I put him in a 10 gallon tank and he kept growing so I gave him to a public aquarium.
 

Therapy

Active Member
This is a topic that I care not to report my opinion on. But... (isn't there always?).... My biggest OMG learning moment was when I visited the New England Aquarium. There was fishes, Tangs, Triggers, (Especially triggers) and Angels CONSTANTLY cruising the tank. I mean 100 feet in a minute. (multi thousand gallon round tank)That turned me off to many reef fishes in a home aquarium. Don't know where I am going with this, but looked like a good place to report my observances.

I have a favorite harass for petco employees. They look at a betta bowl and say they are capable and happy living in that small space. I reply that you could live in a closet for a year and survive. But not be happy.
 

chipmunkofdoom2

Well-Known Member
I think the real question is "does fish affect tank size" (read: do reefers buy larger tanks so they can house larger/more needy fish). And I think the answer there is a resounding yes :D
 

Paul B

Well-Known Member
Love the Coelacanth. They were thought to be extinct because the ocean was to small.

I am glad this thread spurred some discussion and not the normal threads such as: "I have a 20 gallon tank help me pick out fish, I want red ones". Or I just bought a mandarin and he won't eat flakes, what should I do?
I realize "this original" question has no answer, but there are so many arguments because some people do think there is a definite answer here. The only answers can be opinions because there are to many variables. First we have to be able to keep fish to their normal lifespan, and most people don't even have a tank that old yet. Some fish, we just don't know their lifespan for that reason. Even hermit crabs live to 12 years as I have kept them that long. I mentioned that clowns can live to almost 30 years. I really don't know because mine is only 25. Maybe they can live fifty or sixty years. We don't know because no one has ever tried to keep one that long. (In a home aquarium)
We will argue about if fish have feelings. Do I know? No. I don't think they feel pain the way we do but I know they feel something. I hope that a creature that was designed to always be eaten alive doesn't feel much pain. Do they have remorse? I don't know that either, but I feel that a creature that almost always eats it's young as soon as they are born can't have much emotions.
As for real pain, I have seen a shark almost bitten in half so that it was trailing it's intestines many feet behind and it's main goal was to try to eat it's own guts. In my tank I had a hippo tang and he had a shrimp in his mouth. A triggerfish came by and took the shrimp along with the hippo's entire mouth. The hippo didn't seem to care and didn't even seem to notice as he swam around for a week trying to eat even thought he couldn't. If you have ever gone flounder fishing and you caught one that was to small so you threw it back, how many times have you caught that same fish a few minutes later?
Does this all mean that fish do not feel pain? I don't know, but all I have to go on is my observations and "not" re hashed information or rumors that some people believe just because they love their fish. If you are a religious person, Jesus ate fish all the time. I am sure they suffocated on the deck of his boat just as they do today and I doubt he did anything to alleviate their pain.
Many of us feed Mysis, worms, clams, shrimp, squid etc to our fish. Do those things we are feeding have less rights than the creatures we are trying to keep? Did the flounder I ate last night have any rights? How about that dead shrimp we cycled our tank with? If we used a live shrimp or fish, people would be all over us as to how cruel that is but if someone else killed that shrimp so we could let it rot, that is fine! Does this make any sense to anyone? Some of us eat hamburgers and wear leather shoes. Did that cow have as many rights as that goldfish we fed our triggerfish? Why?
 

cracker

Well-Known Member
That's what I would call life on this Earth. The big ones eat the little ones and life goes on. Sometimes the little one eat the big ones that's life. I'd like to think every living creature on this earth " feels" in it's own way. We are just not intelligent enough to understand it. Every living creature on this earth deserves a chance to make a living just like all the others. If we keep any animal for our own pleasure,it is our responsibility to offer them the best.
Now does tank size affect the fish size? If You put a pair of clowns in a 500 gl tank ,will they grow to 7 inches in length? However You put a bat fish in a 55 will it grow so tall the fins stick out of the water. provided ample food and water quality, I say it depends on the type of fish.
 
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Paul B

Well-Known Member
It certainly does depend on the fish and a batfish will not grow big enough for it's fins to stick out of the water. I have had quite a few of them and although they will get fairly big, they will stop growing in a tank. They are not the easiest fish to care for even in a 500 gallon tank
 

PCDS

Active Member
I had a yellow tang in my nano tank for more than a year till it went into my bigger tank. It hasn't grown much bigger. My regal tang was bought as a baby and went straight into the large tank. He remains just slightly smaller than the yellow tang and stopped growing, but both are pretty fat for tangs! In contrast ( since I was fooled by the last two!), when I bought a baby naso tang it grew very fast and kept on growing with no indication that it would stop! So I also agree. It depends on the fish.
 

Antics

Active Member
All evidence being anecdotal, I had a pair of clowns in a 90 for 4 years that never got over 2" in size. On the contrary whenever I would see clowns in other tanks, even smaller ones, the clowns were closer to the 3.5-5" range at that age.

I think you make a good point Paul. Tang police aside, it seems humorous to complain about fish in aquariums while ignoring the elephant in the room that (generally) all fish are unwilling captives for our own amusement.
 
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