Keeping fish from local water bodies in an aquarium. Fishes of our reservoirs. Preparing the aquarium, transporting fish

They quickly get used to the conditions of a wide variety of aquariums, both cold-water and tropical, with a wide range of hardness and acidity, and can tolerate even slightly salty waters. The color of these fish is amazing - metallic blue with iridescent tint. Young roaches are especially good. The darker back is colored from velvet black and emerald to various shades of burgundy. The silver sides shimmer with shades of all the colors of the rainbow, constantly changing so that the eye is not able to fix any specific color. Roach is a peaceful fish with a balanced character, calm and sociable, easily getting used to its owner and willingly demonstrating its affection. She prefers to stay in a school of her own kind or other non-predatory fish, willingly coexisting with crowns, bleaks, bitterlings and breams. Such a flock either becomes denser and begins to live as a single organism, or sometimes, breaking up into small groups, fills the space of the aquarium with the sparkling of living sparks. The most common domestic fish turns out to be surprisingly beautiful and interesting when kept in an aquarium, especially since roaches transplanted from natural reservoirs take root without problems. The fish quickly become accustomed to captivity and begin to actively feed on any food, both live (invertebrates that are suitable in size) and dry, produced for various types of fish. Roaches do not spoil plants, do not dig up the soil - in a word, they are ideal for any, especially office, aquarium.

The fish also thrive in a tropical aquarium at temperatures up to 26°C. Of course, a few roaches can be added to a school of large zebrafish or barbs, but the true beauty of the fish will only appear in a specially designed aquarium for domestic fish. It should combine shelter with open space, dense shadow with spots of bright light. In an aquarium, it is advisable to use side and/or diagonal lighting with dense vegetation in the background. When general illumination is low, individual groups of plants should be brightly illuminated. In dark places it is better to use driftwood or ridges of large stones, but significant spaces - up to 2/3 of the volume - should be left free. Roaches prefer to stay in the middle and lower parts of the aquarium. In order for the fish to flock together, an aquarium with coastal thickets can be supplemented with a medium-sized predator.

The most suitable design options can be recommended:

  • a section of a river with a rapid and a backwater; the rapids are organized by a pump, which creates a flow along the front glass or along the diagonal of the aquarium, and the backwater is organized by dense thickets of plants in the background, slowing down the flow of water; areas with different conditions will form within the volume of the aquarium;
  • a section of a lake with a stream flowing into it, organized by an overflow filter;
  • coastal thickets of chastukha, arrowhead with duckweed and watercolor.

This fish in each body of water is unique in its own way and slightly different from specimens caught in another body of water. These differences are clearly manifested in the shape of the body (elongated/high), and in the color of the fins (especially the dorsal), and in the color of the scales (more or less blue). Young fish (young fish) have a similar color and shape, differing only in the intensity of the blue tint of their scales and the brightness of the orange color of their eyes, while adult fish differ significantly in both color and shape. The body of the roach has the shape of a symmetrical, elongated petal, compressed from the sides. Body height is from 1/4 to 1/3 of length. The length of the caudal peduncle is always greater than the height of the head and ranges from 1/6 to 1/4 of the body length. The scales are large or medium, tightly fitting. The lateral line is complete, with a slight bend towards the belly. The dorsal fin begins above the base of the pelvic fins. The width of the dorsal and anal fins is approximately the same. The dorsal fin has from 7 to 11 branched rays, and the anal fin has 7-13. Behind the ventral fin is a keel covered with scales. The color of the body, fins and eyes of this fish has countless variations depending on the age and conditions of the biotope. The back is dark with a blue or greenish tint, the sides and belly are silvery-white or silvery-blue. The dorsal and caudal fins are gray, sometimes with a red tint, the others are faded orange or faded red, the ventral and anal fins are usually brighter. The mouth is oblique, almost terminal, the apex of the mouth is higher than the lower edge. The iris of the eye is yellow to red. With age, the color of the eyes and fins becomes brighter.

Roach inhabits a wide variety of water bodies: rivers, ponds and lakes, reservoirs. This is a schooling fish that lives on the border between thickets of aquatic vegetation and open water. She loves areas of a reservoir with a slow flow or standing water, willingly settling among thickets of water lilies, near bushes and snags flooded with water, and in deep barrels. The roach tries to avoid cold and fast-flowing sections of rivers and rifts, preferring reaches and calmer, warmer water. It rarely rises to the surface, more often it stays in the water column or in the bottom layers; in small rivers and reservoirs it prefers a sedentary life and is not prone to extensive travel. Roaches use small overseas lakes with unfavorable winter conditions in the spring for reproduction, in the summer for feeding, and go to the rivers for the winter. Roach food is varied and changes with the seasons. In summer, its favorite food is green algae; at the end of July and in August it readily eats duckweed, and at the end of August and in the fall, as the water temperature drops, it switches to feeding on the larvae of mosquitoes, caddisflies, and mayflies. Semi-anadromous forms and large individuals in reservoirs feed on mollusks. In winter, fish gather in deeper places and continue to feed, although less intensely.

Sexual dimorphism during the year is weakly expressed, manifesting itself only in body shape. In females, the body is taller and has an elongated, symmetrical, almost rhombic shape; in males, the body is less symmetrical, rather triangular. By the time of spawning, clearly visible whitish tubercles (nuptial plumage) appear on the body and head of males, and the abdomen of females is noticeably rounded. Roaches breed in the first half of May, when the water temperature rises to 6–8° C. In warm spring, spawning is amicable, but during cold weather it lasts for several weeks. Spawning grounds are located in shallow waters, where fish come in large schools. By this time, male roaches have clearly visible whitish tubercles on their body and head - a kind of mating plumage. Spawning males are usually smaller than females. The eggs stick to herbaceous plants and to the rhizomes of trees and shrubs. The eggs are pale yellow, about 2 mm in diameter. At the moment of laying eggs and milk, the female and male stay side by side and make a short throw through a tuft of grass or sedge. The fertility of roach, depending on the size of the female, ranges from 2.5 to 100 thousand eggs. Their development at a temperature of 11–16°C lasts 7–14 days. The average length of larvae at hatching is about 6 mm. At first, the larvae hang motionless on aquatic plants. After resorption of the yolk sac, they switch to feeding on external food - planktonic crustaceans.

Juvenile roach stay in schools in small bays along with juveniles of other carp fish at the very edge of the water; they are easy to observe and catch from the shore. The size of adult fish in small reservoirs does not exceed 25 cm, usually 12–20 cm. The size of fingerlings is 5–7 cm, yearlings 10–12 cm. In large rivers and vast reservoirs, roach reaches 35 cm and more than 1 kg of weight, and among semi-anadromous fish They are found even larger, up to 50 cm and 2 kg in weight. Roaches live in favorable conditions for quite a long time, up to 20 years, reaching sexual maturity at the age of 2–4 years with a length of more than 10 cm.

The northern border of the range runs along northern Sweden and Finland, the Kola Peninsula (lake Imandra, Lovozero, Ponoy River) and almost all the mouths of rivers flowing into the Arctic Ocean. The southern border of the range runs north of the Alps up to the Azov-Black Sea basin, where it is distributed everywhere, except for the coast of Asia Minor, in the basin of the Caspian and Aral seas.

The common roach is one of the most widespread and numerous species of carp fish in Eurasia. Found from the Pyrenees in the west, to the river. Lena in the east. There is one in Yamal (Seyakha River). It is found in Lake Baikal, lakes Khubsugul and Zaisan, as well as in many isolated lake and river systems in Altai, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. It has been artificially resettled in a number of places outside its natural range. Not in the Far East in the Amur basin.

Of course, many people like to breed aquarium fish, but what if you live in a rural area and traveling to the city for food, equipment and new inhabitants becomes a problem?

If you love exotic things and would like to keep fish from local waters at home, we will tell you how to do it correctly.

What river fish can live in an aquarium?

The range of representatives of rivers suitable for a home pond is quite large: carp, verkhovka, tench, rudd, etc.

Before populating the aquarium, you need to take into account that the most “resistant” fish will be from a body of water that is not flowing or has a weak current. Also, fish caught in the fall will be more resilient to the conditions of an artificially created habitat.

When settling river residents, it is necessary to take into account that coexistence of predatory and non-predatory fish is impossible.

Predatory animals (perch, pike, pike perch, catfish) need live fish for food, unlike non-predatory animals (bream, rudd, carp, crucian carp), which use plants and invertebrate animals as food.

Regarding the types of fish suitable for keeping at home, the most unpretentious representative is the crucian carp, which can “survive” even in the most difficult conditions.

It creates a special layer around itself consisting of water and dirt, and in such conditions it can last for about 2-3 months.

Therefore, crucian carp are the best option for keeping in a home pond. This fish loves a lot of vegetation and algae, so this must be taken into account when “populating” this inhabitant.

The most important condition is to create a habitat for the fish that is similar to their native one (rivers, reservoirs, ponds).

In order for the residents to feel free and comfortable, it is necessary to prepare a large aquarium with algae (duckweed, hornwort, trampweed, glitterweed), which can acclimatize in the conditions of a home pond.

Preparing the aquarium, transporting fish

When preparing for the introduction of river fish into a home aquarium, first of all, you should pay attention to the soil; small pebbles are best in this case.

The development of fish in a new place will be successful if, after catching, it is placed in water from its permanent habitat. And at home, new guests should be placed in an aquarium with 50% clean water and the same amount of water should be added from the reservoir.

In order not to injure the caught fish during transportation, you need to choose comfortable dishes (it is better to use wide and low ones). It is recommended to carry 4-5 copies in a 5 liter container.

If the journey is long, take care of temporary aeration for the fish; such a device can be made from a hose, a spray bulb and a sprayer.

In order for the fish to quickly get used to the new habitat, it is better to catch it in reservoirs with a reduced oxygen regime, or at a certain time of the year: in the summer - during a period of intense heat, when the water is already beginning to “bloom”, in the winter - during the period of “freezing”, when fish gather near the ice holes.

The most resistant to new conditions are small fish (fry) approximately 3-4 cm in size. It is better to catch large inhabitants in the spring.

To create conditions close to natural, the water must be replaced during purification with the following composition: half of the settled water and the same amount of natural water. The saturation of water with oxygen is created by blowing.

At the beginning of rehoming, you should notice changes in your pets' behavior and adjust the aeration time, making it shorter or longer (up to 24 hours)

A critical point that requires your attention is the natural increase in the temperature of the water in the aquarium during the summer.

Because in warm water the fish will lack oxygen; this problem can be solved by lowering the aquarium temperature by adding cold water. Sometimes you can even add tap water, not settled.

After about 2-3 weeks, the fish will wean themselves off natural water, so keeping and caring for them will not be so burdensome.

How and what to feed fish from reservoirs?

The most important thing is not to give a lot of food, only at one time, so that it is eaten immediately, otherwise the water will quickly become contaminated.

How many fish can you stock?

One of the main points is the demands of each species on the oxygen content in the home pond.

Undemanding species include: tench, crucian carp, char, and spikefish. Fish up to 4 cm in length should be kept in a container no larger than 3 liters; if there is partial ventilation, then 2 liters will be enough.

Fish that require high oxygen content: rudd, roach, gudgeon.

For representatives with a length of 4 cm, you should prepare a container of about 5 liters, in the presence of aeration (even partial) - 3 liters. Perch suffers the most from oxygen starvation.

Based on the needs of the inhabitants of the aquarium, you should proceed when calculating the number of fish in it.

The rule is this: for each fish up to 4 cm in size there should be 5-6 liters. water, with partial aeration - 4 l. If the fish is larger, the amount of water for each individual must be increased accordingly.

In favorable and properly created conditions of home aquariums, river fish quickly acclimatize and live a long time.

Thanks to the Zolotaya Rybka company for the material provided.

More on the topic:

Aquarium preparation for domestic fish is the same as for warm-water fish. In both cases, it is necessary to take into account the characteristics of the soil. For fish that stir up the soil, it should be pebbly. The ability to never heat the water allows you to focus on the use of moderately heat-loving plants of the tropics and plants of local reservoirs.

Delivery and acclimatization of fish for keeping in an aquarium, it can be successful if you bring them home in the water of the reservoir from which they were caught, and at home place them in an aquarium with settled tap water, half mixed with the one in which they lived. To make it easier to cope with the acclimatization of fish, they must be caught from reservoirs poor in oxygen (in pits, ditches, bays separated from rivers, etc., where the fish lived for a long time in a low oxygen regime), or at a time of year when, according to different conditions, reasons, even in vast bodies of water, there is a lack of oxygen: in the summer - during great heat or when the water “blooms”, and in the winter during “freezes”, forcing fish to accumulate at ice holes or vents in search of an environment rich in oxygen.

Small fish 3-4 cm in length tolerate transportation and acclimatization better than others. But it is most reliable to catch large fry in the spring. True, in this case it is not always possible to recognize which fish fry are caught, but one must hope that among them there will be those that are recommended for keeping in captivity.

Delivery of fish home should be so reliable that the brought specimens remain playful, without any damage. For this purpose, preference is given to wide and low dishes. You can bring three or four fish in a 4-5 liter container. During a long journey, it is recommended to use “travelling” aeration, pre-assembled from a hose, a sprayer and a spray bulb.

Acclimatization of fish begins with the fact that the best living conditions are created for them, close to natural ones: the water must be constantly fresh, periodically replaced with a mixture (50% natural water with settled tap water). Freshness - the saturation of water with oxygen - can be maintained by aeration. Fish gradually wean themselves off natural water, even one poor in oxygen, while at the same time getting used to the new living conditions in the aquarium. Over time, their need for familiar conditions of existence in nature completely disappears, and keeping fish in an aquarium becomes easy.

At first, observing the behavior of acclimatized fish, it is necessary to either lengthen the aeration time to around the clock, or shorten it, reducing it to a minimum. If, despite aeration, the fish still takes in atmospheric air from the surface of the water, it must be replaced - approximately 1/3 of the total volume of the aquarium.

Sometimes critical moments may arise in acclimatization or in general in the life of domestic fish in the aquarium. This happens when the water temperature rises in the summer (warm water has little oxygen), in which case it is necessary to lower the temperature - dilute the warm water with settled cold tap water. All difficulties of acclimatization begin to recede after two to three weeks.

The fish are fed mainly with live moving food (cyclops, daphnia, bloodworms). Fish are reluctant to take stationary food, but over time they get used to it - the smaller the fish, the sooner.

In favorable conditions of large aquariums, domestic acclimatized fish live for a long time, reaching significant sizes. This complicates their maintenance, and over time, large fish have to be replaced with small ones. At suitable temperatures (moderate in summer and cool in winter - changes in seasonality), good food and dense vegetation, some of these fish, having laid eggs, give birth,

Combining different fish in one aquarium it is quite possible, but this must be done taking into account a very important feature - the requirement for the amount of oxygen in the water. One group can be made up of the most undemanding fish: crucian carp, tench, loach, spined loach and even loach. For a fish no more than 4 cm long, you need at least 3 liters of water. With partial aeration, this rate is reduced to 2 liters. The group with an increased oxygen requirement includes roach, rudd, verkhovka, bleak and gudgeon. Here, a fish up to 4 cm long also requires up to 4.5-5 liters of water, and with partial air blowing - 3 liters. Perch is most sensitive to lack of oxygen. Hence the stocking norm: for each fish of the specified length, 5-6 liters of water are required. Partial blowing reduces the rate to 4 liters. Increasing the size of fish requires increasing the amount of water for each of them.

Golden carp, Silver carp

In the aquarium, crucian carp are fed cut worms, bloodworms, raw scraped beef, enchytraeus, grains of millet porridge and crumbs of white bread, all in limited quantities. The crucian carp also takes dry daphnia when it, having become wet, sinks to the bottom. It readily eats green algae from glass and plants. The best temperature for keeping crucian carp is no higher than 22°. With a sufficient amount of oxygen in the water, crucian carp can easily tolerate its temporary overheating.

Tench

For the aquarium, small molts are taken, because large ones (in case of hunger) can attack small fish. Tench pick up food from the bottom, feeding on chopped earthworms, scraped lean beef, bloodworms, and enchytraeus. Having become accustomed to life in an aquarium, tench, according to some observations, become omnivorous. When the temperature drops significantly, he becomes lethargic and eats poorly.

Verkhovodka

It is not difficult to obtain perched water by catching the upper sections of the reservoir with a gauze net. You cannot pick up caught fish, as the delicate silver scales immediately fall off. They are moved from the net to the carrier (dishes for transport) by shaking them out. Also, you should not collect too many fish at once: they die from overcrowding and changes in living conditions, to which they are very sensitive.

There are known cases where perchalids gave birth to offspring in small 30-40-liter aquariums. This occurs mainly from changes in the temperature conditions of the fish. In the warm months of the year, the water temperature in the aquarium should not exceed 24°, and in winter it should be within 12-14°, which is achieved by moving the aquarium to a cool place, perhaps on a windowsill. In winter, the fish are almost not fed until the onset of spring warmth.

And if in the spring someone is lucky enough to see newborn fry, the first thing he must do is separate them from their parents. The fry are fed in the same way as is done when breeding exotic fish (according to Table 5).

Roach

The conditions for keeping roach in the aquarium are common to all cyprinids, and its omnivorous nature makes it possible to expand the diet with dry food. Fish feel especially good if you feed them a little with green algae called mulberry at least from time to time. You can get it in the river, removing it from wooden or reinforced concrete structures immersed in water. Fluctuating with the current, the algae looks like thin, bright green threads.

Rudd

In the aquarium, the rudd feels great, requiring careful attention only during the acclimatization period.

A significant part of its food in nature consists of microalgae, mainly filamentous, the so-called mulberry. In an aquarium, if she was not constantly given only live or dry food, she would never change her habit. In fact, in an aquarium where there is a lot of microalgae, the rudd need not be fed with other food, such as grains of porridge, crumbs of white bread, etc.

Spawning of rudd in captivity is not uncommon, but this requires many conditions, the main ones being the presence of different-sex fish of sufficient size, their winter keeping in cool water on a meager food ration, strengthening of food and temperature conditions with the approach of spring, periodic refreshment (replacement) of parts water, the use of aeration, the maximum number of small-leaved plants concentrated in one place in the aquarium, and, finally, the spawning water temperature is not lower than 18°.

Perch

The water norm for perch in an aquarium is the highest - 5-6 liters per fish up to 4 cm long, but such a recommendation cannot be taken formally: one perch cannot live in such a container. And it’s a completely different matter if four or five perch are placed in a 30-40 liter aquarium. Perches need room to move, and to prevent them from jumping out of the aquarium, its surface is covered with glass.

In the summer, when the temperature in the rooms rises significantly, the water in the aquarium has to be constantly refreshed (replaced) and continuously aerated. Water temperatures above 15° are considered critical for perch. They become lethargic, lose color and, having stopped eating, die.

Perches are fed with cyclops, daphnia and other moving live food. Perch take food only “on the fly” - while lowering it to the bottom, and what is not eaten and ends up on the ground must be removed immediately. A lump of scraped meat, for example, can be given with tweezers so that it is in the fish’s field of view.


Subclass: Neopterygii Cope, 1871 = Newfinned fish
Order: Cypriniformes = Cypriniformes
Family: Cyprinidae = Cyprinidae
Genus: Rutilus Rafinesque, 1820 = Roach
Species: Rutilus (=Leuciscus) rutilus L = Roach

Species: Leuciscus rutilus L = Roach

One of the most common Russian fish. The body is oval, more or less elongated, depending on age, sex and degree of development of the ovaries or milk. The head is rather thick, with a rounded muzzle; the mouth is small, the upper lip protrudes slightly above the lower; the eye is large, however, it also varies greatly in accordance with the size of the fish. The color of the roach is silvery-white (in large specimens the belly is mostly pinkish or with a pinkish tint), the dorsal and caudal fins are greenish with redness; pectoral fins are pale yellowish, in large specimens they are orange; abdominal and anal - red. The iris is orange with a red spot at the top.

The so-called lateral line stands out especially clearly on the body of the roach - a series of scales, equipped with a tubule, stretching along the sides of the body from the head to the base of the caudal fin, in which sensory nerve cells are located. This line serves to determine the lateral water pressure and current strength. It plays an important role in the fish’s choice of location and helps it in crossings and wandering along rivers, indicating the direction of water flow. Thanks to it, the fish easily recognizes what kind of water it is in at a given time: stagnant or flowing, the strength of its current, and as a result can choose in it those conditions that are necessary for its life.

Thanks to it, wandering fish have the ability to find river mouths by the increasing pressure inside the aquatic environment from the influx of tributaries and find places where these tributaries flow into the main river so that during spawning they can leave upstream from the main river and disperse along them. With its help, they seem to sense the proximity of the flow of these tributaries when they are still floating along the main river.

Roach is found everywhere: in rivers, streams, lakes and even ponds with clean, clear water; it avoids only cold and fast water and prefers quieter and warmer water. In addition, it does not tolerate mud or silt and therefore is found only in lakes and ponds with a sandy, cartilaginous bottom.

Roach is a fairly lively and agile fish. In summer and spring, in a word, during the entire warm season, it lives constantly in shallow bays, and with the onset of winter it goes deeper and remains there until the ice breaks up. In summer it stays scattered or in very small schools, but by winter it gathers in schools almost as dense as during spawning in the spring. However, roach always leads a social lifestyle and belongs, without a doubt, to the most gregarious Russian fish. One-year-old roaches gather in especially large runes; those that are larger are caught in large flocks less often.

The main food of roaches in spring and autumn is algae and aquatic grasses, and in summer small insects, worms and small crustaceans. In addition, at this time, it is said that it also sometimes feeds on the corpses of other fish. At least, according to most fishermen, they often happened to catch roaches on pieces of fish intended as bait for predatory fish.

Roach spawning in our countries occurs in early May, and in the south - earlier. Roach eggs develop rather slowly, and the young hatch no earlier than 8-10 days; but it hatches in such countless quantities that it floats like black clouds near the surface of the water, and in those places where spawning occurs, it makes even the water itself seem alive.

Having hatched, the juveniles first hide in a thicket of reeds and water grasses, in which they hide from their countless enemies and look for food, consisting mainly of daphnia, cyclops and other small crustaceans; and then little by little begins to emerge from their shelters into clean water and, leaving shallow places at the beginning of autumn, moves into the riverbed or the middle of a pond, where it remains until the frost begins, and then it retreats into the deepest holes and scurries around in them until the ice breaks up. Roaches usually become capable of spawning only in the third year, and in the second only in rare cases.

In an aquarium, small roaches hold up quite well and get along well with other fish, but when they reach large sizes, they become almost as dangerous for their small counterparts as perch. True, being a herbivorous fish rather than a carnivorous one, it does not eat fish, but nevertheless loves to suck in fish. I’ve never had a roach in my aquarium, and therefore I can’t say anything on my own about its morals, but I’ve heard that small rafts like to swim in schools and rush into a stream of fresh water, like verkhovkas; however, they don’t like it to be completely cold and try to move as far away from the place of its influx as possible, and when the general temperature drops, in contrast to perches, they even lose all playfulness and cheerfulness and become as if sleepy.

In addition to the ordinary roach, there is also a lovely variety with golden scales and a reddish tint on the back and sides, a variety that is very rare and, as far as I know, is found only in the Volga near Saratov.

Finally, I cannot help but mention another painful form - the degenerate roach. The body of this roach is completely transparent, more transparent than that of the roach. The gills are clearly visible through the gill covers, and the insides are visible through the walls of the abdomen. The body is all one color - colorless. The scales are transparent, bordered by several rows of dark dots. The iris is orange with black spots.

An unusual direction was chosen - the production of aquariums for commercial fish. A new type of activity for our country. However, having managed to select an experienced team of professionals, the company was able to confidently enter this market segment and achieve great success. Thanks to skillful specialists, we were able to introduce advanced technologies for manufacturing a wide range of commercial aquariums for various types of aquatic organisms. Registration of our innovations in the patent office has become commonplace. The company's team strives for improvement in its business. We are constantly studying world experience in our field. We monitor the emergence of new products. We analyze them with a view to introducing them into production. Products are manufactured using high-precision equipment, which ensures compliance with all technological processes and rules. The quality of products is repeatedly checked at all stages of production.

Our products are noticeably different from those available on the Russian market, domestic and foreign analogues. The constant desire for high quality of manufactured equipment has become the main principle of the company. A large number of service departments throughout our country allows us to collect complete information about the operation of our products. We analyze the data in order to identify possible problems in advance, with the goal of eliminating them completely. These activities help to achieve the best quality products. For us there are no limits to improving the equipment we manufacture. The entire workforce is focused on accomplishing these tasks.

The product range is constantly updated, depending on market requirements. We have aquariums for different types of aquatic organisms. From crustaceans to sturgeons. From freshwater to sea and ocean inhabitants. We take care of potential clients by introducing new types of equipment with reduced energy consumption into production. We try to simplify the operation of our products. The product line, in price terms, is designed for different categories of buyers. From small shops to the largest retail chains. The volumes of aquariums are suitable for different areas of trading floors. We study customer needs that arise when working with aquatic animals. Therefore, additional equipment is available to help make this job easier. We also pay great attention to the design of our products. The colors and shapes of the products will please the eyes of your customers and aesthetically fit into the interior. And additional lighting will add additional attractiveness to the marine inhabitants of aquariums. Marking of equipment by applying a unique registration number eliminates possible errors when replacing consumables or selecting spare parts. The company’s specialists will easily replace consumable parts of the equipment.

Our customer service is available 24 hours a day, every day. The operators will treat your request carefully and competently. It will be processed immediately. Throughout our country, the response time will be no more than four hours. The AquaMir-M company cares about its reputation and is responsible for the high quality of manufactured equipment, including providing guarantees for live fish. This will allow you to eliminate all doubts about the performance of our products and make the right choice.

The team of the company AkvaMir-M.