Good Beginner Books
Most aquarium books are reasonable in their advice. Do be
careful of older books which were written before some of the more
recent advances in the science of aquaria were made. Issues such
as the nitrogen cycle will probably not be covered well. Libraries
are an excellent source of books, and one should go the library
first before spending any money.
- Baensh's Aquarium Atlas (~$22-28)
- Marine Aquarium Handbook by Martin Moe (~$10)
- Vierke's Aquarium Book ($10-15)
- Marine Aquarium Reference:
Systems and Invertebrates by Moe (~$22-25)
- The Concise Encyclopedia of Aq. Fish by Dick Mills (~$10)
Many of the ``Fishkeeper's Guide'' Books by Tetra press are quite
good, and are available for around $6-$10. For plant books,
Barron's and Tetra's (~$5-6) are suggested.
A decent aquarium reference book need not be expensive or very
detailed. What it must have is:
- enough common species to make it usable
(200-300 species is sufficient for most purposes)
- recognizable pictures of fish to use as the identification
guide descriptions of the species including:
- length the fish will attain
- typical behavior (and community tank compatibility)
- spawning requirements
- dietary needs
- minimal tank size
- water quality and temperature
- some basic suggestions on how to set up an aquarium
- some minimal info on fish diseases
There are many books that satisfy these requirements. They are very
inexpensive and there is no excuse for someone to spend $20+ on the fish
that will die in 3-4 weeks instead of buying a book that would prevent
these losses for a lot less money.
For under $10:
Simon&Schuster's Pocket Guide to Aquarium Fishes lists for $7
and can be found for $4 in discount book shops. Not an ``end-all''
reference volume but at least it does not lie too much. I probably
like it because it has an excellent photo of Aphyosemion filamentosum
that looks just about like the A. filamentosum I have. (ISBN 0-671-25451-0)
At Crown Books and other ``remaindered'' book sellers, you will find a
book edited by Dick Mills that is called
The Concise Encyclopedia of
Tropical Aquarium Fishes
if it's published by Crescent (and Tetra's
Junior Atlas of Tropical Aquarium Fishes if it's published by Tetra).
It covers all the basic ideas about setting up an aquarium and has
descriptions and fair quality photos of over 300 species of fish (the
book is not in front of me so can't give you more detail). It's
published by Salamander Press in Europe and Tetra (Crescent) in US.
(Crescent edition ISBN 0-517-66776-2)
At Tower Books and other ``mainstream'' bookseller chains and larger book
stores, you will find Barron's series of translation of German aquarium
books, all between $5 and $8, concentrating on specific categories of
fish (Killifishes (ISBN 0-8120-4475-4), Cichlids (ISBN 0-8120-4597-1)),
or breeding (Ines Scheurman's Aquarium Fish Breeding (ISBN
0-8120-4474-6)), or general aquarium maintenance, or plants. All of
these books give a beginner a solid introduction to what and why of the
the filtration, water chemistry and so on. Any of these books make an
excellent starting point. They don't have very many color photos,
which probably contributed to the low price, but have a lot of
drawings.
Also near the $10 mark (and a lot less through mail-order), are the
Tetra/Salamander series of ``Fishkeeper's Guide To...'' books. They are
available at a number of ``normal'' book stores and I recommend ``...
Healthy Aquarium'' and ``...Community Fishes'' as the better beginner
books. The rest of the series is quite good as well and any one of
these books should be a great start.
``The Innes Book'' -- First published in 1935,
it is a thick volume that has gone through a dozen
publishers and something like 50 editions. The newer ones will
probably be a bit more up to date, but the older ones are not bad,
either. They range from $2 to $15 and my preference is for the oldest
editions. Don't expect the fish names to match the current nomenclature
or in some case even the real species -- for the last 40 years ``The Innes
Book'' has had a picture of A. filamentosum for their Aphyosemion gardneri.
These are the cheapest books. If you are willing to spend $15-20 (and
you better be willing to spend that much on the books if you are go
to spend that much on the fish!), the number of books is larger and the
amount of information increases.
Between $15 and $20
The books get larger, more colorful and complete:
van Ramshorst's Aquarium Encyclopedia published by HPBooks and sold by
Waldenbooks is a translation from Dutch and at $17.95 is among the
better ``shopping list'' aquarium books. It is full of very good quality
color photos, covers over 570 species of fish, 80 species of plants,
all aspects of aquarium design, building, set-up, decor, etc. Not much
on filtration, but that's all in the FAQ, so not a big flaw for a USENET
reader.
Crown Books used to sell The Living Aquarium, a translation from
Swedish published by Crescent Books. It's close to $20 and does not
have descriptions of too many species, but has a lot of detailed
diagrams, goes into the black arts of filtration and lighting and
attempts to cover cold water and tropical fresh water, cold water and
tropical marine and brackish aquaria, suggesting the species and decor
for them. It also has a section on building aquaria, as all European
books seem to.
More Expensive and/or Specialty Books
There are many other books that are not cheap even when you buy them
mail-order (a sure way to save 50% on the price). Many of these books
cost so much because of the large number of color photos in them and
because of the production values that went in. You will have to decide
for yourself if it's worth your money to buy these and if you will find
something really worth while in them (I have spent several hundred $$$
on such books over the last few years and do not regret buying any of
them). If nothing else, these books make great coffee table books that
are bound to get all sorts of comments from house guests.
Where to Find the Cheapest Books
Look through the used book stores. Books from 20-30 years ago may have
wrong Latin names for some of the fish, claim that certain species of
now-common fish are hard to breed, and may have less than adequate
coverage of filtration, but those books are still excellent general
references and (should) cost very little.
What Not to Buy
AVOID any books by TFH that are less than 100 pages or have a word
``Beginner'' in the title. Leaf through the book: if you see lots of
photos of products placed so that brand names are obvious and easy to
read, or you find a bunch of photos of grinning gap-toothed kids
holding up various pieces of equipment or poking their hands into an
aquarium -- put this book away and never look at it again. These books
are (in my opinion) utter garbage.
There are a few exceptions to that rule in the TFH line: Dr. Jubb's
``Nothobranchius'', 2 volumes of Jocher's ``Spawning Problem Fishes'' and
Windelow's ``Aquatic Plants'', but they fall into the ``specialty''
category).
Magazines
Contents
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