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3ft/1ftwide fish tank clearseal .£35 just tank. 3ft/1ft clear seal fishtank with lid no light comes with 1 filter and stones phone ad ID: 1234689852 delivery service consumer creditLarge Fish TanksSmall Fish TanksCorner Fish TanksMarine Fish TankAquarium Fish TankTropical Fish Tanks3ft Fish TankFish Tank OrnamentFish tanks for tropical fish, cold-water fish, or other fish come in many different sizes, from the classic gold fish bowl, to the wall-sized fish tank for large-scale aquatic environments.The size is the main difference among fish tanks, but they also vary in the type of filters, heaters, and current generators built in. The larger aquariums generally have more elaborate arrangements and also require more care and cleaning. Make sure you buy the right tank for your fish on display.Aquarium Fish TankSee moreSmall Aquarium Fish Tank Tropical / Coldwater 37L PL Lights - Boyu MR-418 Black4ft juwel 240 fish tank aquarium jewel watchingCOMPLETE INTERPET NANO LED 12 LITRE AQUARIUM FISH TANK TROPICAL STARTER KIT SET

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sold198L Cabinet Aquarium Fish Tank Tropical / Marine 84cm 2.9ft with LED LightingsoldAqua One Aquarium marine Fish Tank Glass Sump - 63cm L x 41cm H x 35cm D7 soldMARINE FISH TANK BUNDLE set up and standProduct added to cart. Title of search result Closed Easter Sunday, Christmas Day & Boxing Day Types of Fish Sold Marine Fish & Invertebrates African Lake Cichlids "L-number" Catfish We are situated in Newtownabbey in the north of Belfast, only 10 minutes’ drive from the Sandyknowes roundabout off the M2. The store is based in Hillside NurseryCentre, which boasts a great coffee shop to help make a good day out even better! The main centrepiece of the shop is a 5,000-litre display pond filtered by a Nexus system. Our shop systems have almost 200 tanks with Coldwater fancy goldfish, tropical and marine fish. For marines, we have three large coral trays heavily stocked with a wide range of hand-picked coral from all over the world. We also have display tanks for Discus and Lake Tanganyika Cichlids as well as a reef setup.

Expert Advice & Support Help for getting started Keep your fish healthy
why do aquarium fish stay at the topAs an enthusiastic fish-keeper, Alex Cunnison liked nothing better than watching his colourful pets dart around the tank in his living room.
t5 aquarium bulb reviewsBut little did he know that - however relaxing they were to look at - his tropical fish were making him seriously unwell.
toy fish aquarium reviewsIn fact, the 70-year-old contracted an incredibly rare disease that baffled doctors and left him struggling to breathe.Last night the retired bus driver - whose illness was so unusual that it was written up in a medical journal - told the Scottish Mail on Sunday how cleaning his aquarium nearly cost him his life.

Alex Cunnison has a rare disease that was caused by inhaling the water from his tropical fish tank over a period of yearsAs part of his fish-keeping routine, Mr Cunnison would place one end of a hose in the tank then suck on the other end to start siphoning out the dirty water into a bucket.Although he never swallowed the water, he inhaled bacteria which then infected his lung.He became sicker and sicker - but at first had no idea that his aquarium was to blame.Instead, he feared he had cancer when he started losing weight and developed a persistent cough which left him struggling to breathe. Mr Cunnison feared he had cancer when he started losing weight and developed a persistent cough which left him struggling to breatheHe was forced to cancel a sunshine holiday as mystified doctors struggled to find the cause of his symptoms.After months of tests, medics revealed the astonishing truth - that bacteria inhaled as he siphoned water from the fish tank had caused a potentially fatal ‘fish tank granuloma’ - a type of lesion - in his lung.

Such an infection is so rare the case has now been detailed in a medical journal as only the third of its kind ever reported.Last night Mr Cunnison spoke of the life-threatening ordeal caused by his shoal of small tropical fish. He said: ‘I could have died. It was taking over my whole lung.‘I enjoyed looking after the fish. They were really nice to look at, pretty bright colours and quite relaxing. I enjoyed looking at them - at the time. If I’d only known.’ After months of tests, medics revealed that bacteria inhaled as he siphoned water from the fish tank had caused a potentially fatal ‘fish tank granuloma’ - a type of lesion - in his lungThe father-of-four kept 20 tropical fish in a large tank measuring about four by three feet.To clean it, he would start siphoning water with his mouth using a rubber pipe, then let it run out into a bucket.After about six years, he and partner Kathline Bellard, 65, decided to redecorate and gave the fish to his grand-daughter Millie, now 12.But months later Mr Cunnison developed a cough which left him struggling to breathe.

He said: ‘I put it off for a good couple of months but eventually I made an appointment with the doctor when my partner put the pressure on. I had trouble breathing; I was stuggling to catch my breath and was light-headed and dizzy. I’d lost a wee bit of weight too - and I’m only eight stone two as it is. He said: 'I really appreciate the NHS for all they did'‘I went to the doctor who sent me straight up to the hospital for an x-ray. He phoned back that same evening to make an appointment for the following morning. I assumed it must be cancer. We had a sleepless night.‘They said it wasn’t cancer, but it might be TB. I cancelled the holiday to Tenerife.’Over the coming months further tests eliminated TB and identified the bacterium which was slowing destroying Mr Cunnison’s lung as Mycobacterium Marinum.Found in water, it typically causes lesions on the skin through a cut or scratch, although this is rare. To find it in the lungs is rarer still.‘The consultant at the hospital was baffled.

Eventually they said it was an infection fishermen get. That was the first thing they asked me: did I go fishing? Then we mentioned that I used to siphon the fish tank with my mouth. But I hadn’t had them for a year and a half - the lesions must have just been there, growing all that time.‘I really appreciate the NHS for all they did.‘We’d been doing it every month, cleaning the tank out, never thinking anything would happen. Now I wish I’d got a pump to clean the tank - but people have siphoned fish tanks like that for years.’ Mr Cunnison, of Livingston, West Lothian, is now free of infection after a year of treatment with a cocktail of antibioticsMr Cunnison, of Livingston, West Lothian, is now free of infection after a year of treatment with a cocktail of antibiotics. He no longer keeps fish - and neither do Millie and her mum Nicola, Mr Cunnison’s 46-year-old daughter.Dr Donald Noble, consultant physician at St John’s Hospital, Livingston, said: ‘Mycobacterium Marinum is an environmental bacteria which can cause chronic skin infections in aquarium workers.

However, infection in the lungs is highly unusual. This is the only reported case of lung infection due to M. marinum in Scotland and there are only a few case reports reported in the medical literature worldwide. In this case the likely route of infection was from siphoning water from a fish tank after initiating the siphon by mouth.‘These infections cause progressive destruction of lung tissue and are often difficult to treat.’Mr Cunnison’s case was reported in the Scottish Medical Journal in November.The paper said: ‘We report only the third documented case of pulmonary infection with M. marinum in an immunocompetent individual.’Colin Pannell, of the Federation of British Aquatic Societies, said: ‘I’ve been keeping fish for 45 years and I’ve never heard of anything like this. The chances of anything like that happening have got to be millions to one. Don’t swallow the water – and if it goes in, spit it out and use a mouthwash. But if you want to be absolutely safe, use a pump.’