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Cycling with Damsels
When I was investigating starting my reef tank I was told by one LFS
that they would sell me 2 Domino Damsels for $10 to get my 29g tank cycled. I was welcome to bring them back in a month or 2 for 1/2 credit. I have to admit I was quite happy with this offer. The store owner was quite surprised when I brought them back 2 months later and exchanged them both for a pair of Percula Clowns and an anemone. The Damsels were doing quite well and were a bit larger than he was expecting them to be. We had 35lbs. of live rock in the tank, Fluval 204 canister filter, 40lbs of live sand and a Corallife Aqualite moonlight with a 65w 10K and a 65w Actinic. We let the tank sit empty for 3 weeks and there was no spike in any reading. We added the Dominos and we had all spikes as expected in 2 weeks. 6 months later we migrated to one of our 75 gallon tanks and made the 29 a Molly only tank. My anemone was almost a victim of the Fluval intake. We got a foam filter for it after this incident. A 2nd anemone managed to commit powerhead-icide. Just when I thought this was too far out of the way to reach he decided to climb the live rock and jump for it. Now that we know to feed Chip the Chocolate Chip Star twice a week we haven't lost any more anemones and the P. and O. Clowns are happy. OK. Its late and I'm rambling again ... Back to the point. I wouldn't have even considered cycling the tank with Damsels until it was suggested by the LFS owner. If it wasn't for the fact that I wanted the clowns and anemones I would probably still have them. Enjoy, Greg KurtG wrote: Tristan wrote: I can honestly say I have only ever had one fish in the damsel family, a blue devil, and it was bought by my son and was placed in the one tank without my or the wifes permission. AFAIK, Damsils are considered "starter fish" because you can add them to a new aquarium w/ live rock to provide ammonia load and get the system cycled and running. They are cheap and hardy enough to survive this environment. Problem is that they are fairly docile when immature, but grow increasingly aggressive as they age and can only be kept with other aggressive species. This blue fin damsel will actually turn black over time. As for the offending damsil, I've been planning on a second tank with more aggressive fish (no corals or anemone), so he'll be my first if he survives long enough. --Kurt |
Cycling with Damsels
I am not for using damsels to cycle a tank. Why? There is other means to do it without using a fish that in all probability no one is going to want to keep afterwards. You had live rock, that was sufficieint to initiate a cycle all by itself so wsa the live sand. On 19 Dec 2006 21:59:23 -0800, " wrote: When I was investigating starting my reef tank I was told by one LFS that they would sell me 2 Domino Damsels for $10 to get my 29g tank cycled. I was welcome to bring them back in a month or 2 for 1/2 credit. I have to admit I was quite happy with this offer. The store owner was quite surprised when I brought them back 2 months later and exchanged them both for a pair of Percula Clowns and an anemone. The Damsels were doing quite well and were a bit larger than he was expecting them to be. We had 35lbs. of live rock in the tank, Fluval 204 canister filter, 40lbs of live sand and a Corallife Aqualite moonlight with a 65w 10K and a 65w Actinic. We let the tank sit empty for 3 weeks and there was no spike in any reading. We added the Dominos and we had all spikes as expected in 2 weeks. 6 months later we migrated to one of our 75 gallon tanks and made the 29 a Molly only tank. My anemone was almost a victim of the Fluval intake. We got a foam filter for it after this incident. A 2nd anemone managed to commit powerhead-icide. Just when I thought this was too far out of the way to reach he decided to climb the live rock and jump for it. Now that we know to feed Chip the Chocolate Chip Star twice a week we haven't lost any more anemones and the P. and O. Clowns are happy. OK. Its late and I'm rambling again ... Back to the point. I wouldn't have even considered cycling the tank with Damsels until it was suggested by the LFS owner. If it wasn't for the fact that I wanted the clowns and anemones I would probably still have them. Enjoy, Greg KurtG wrote: Tristan wrote: I can honestly say I have only ever had one fish in the damsel family, a blue devil, and it was bought by my son and was placed in the one tank without my or the wifes permission. AFAIK, Damsils are considered "starter fish" because you can add them to a new aquarium w/ live rock to provide ammonia load and get the system cycled and running. They are cheap and hardy enough to survive this environment. Problem is that they are fairly docile when immature, but grow increasingly aggressive as they age and can only be kept with other aggressive species. This blue fin damsel will actually turn black over time. As for the offending damsil, I've been planning on a second tank with more aggressive fish (no corals or anemone), so he'll be my first if he survives long enough. --Kurt ------- I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know! |
How to catch a Damsil?
It's no joke, a tiny hook works best for the most
aggressive fish, ie the one that will be the first to take the bait. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets KurtG wrote on 12/17/2006 7:25 PM: Tristan wrote: Short of a spear gun or dynamite Damsels are tough fish to catch ;-) The 2 liter bottle trap caught my coral beauty and the offending damsel in about 3 minutes. He's already in my quarantine tank. I hope you weren't kidding about the fish hook. The smallest I could find was #10 and it was just too big. Although, I almost nailed a Tang. I pulled out the hook in the nick of time. However, I gave up wondering if it was a joke. :-) A smaller hook would have worked. --Kurt |
How to catch a Damsil?
I kow in a lot of areas a small tiny hook is not the eaisest thing to
find. SOme folks use salmon egg hooks and others use a hook which looks like a segment of a circle. You can always take a hook (as small as yu can find), and heat it with a cigarette lighter to red hot and use a needle nose pliers to reform the hook point to shank distance to a smaller dimension, and then squeeze in the barb. Heating will take the temper out of the hook which may be a problem if your trying to catch dinner or looking for that world record fish, but a one time deal on a aquarium fish it should not be a problem. On Thu, 21 Dec 2006 17:43:33 GMT, Wayne Sallee wrote: It's no joke, a tiny hook works best for the most aggressive fish, ie the one that will be the first to take the bait. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets KurtG wrote on 12/17/2006 7:25 PM: Tristan wrote: Short of a spear gun or dynamite Damsels are tough fish to catch ;-) The 2 liter bottle trap caught my coral beauty and the offending damsel in about 3 minutes. He's already in my quarantine tank. I hope you weren't kidding about the fish hook. The smallest I could find was #10 and it was just too big. Although, I almost nailed a Tang. I pulled out the hook in the nick of time. However, I gave up wondering if it was a joke. :-) A smaller hook would have worked. --Kurt ------- I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know! |
Cycling with Damsels
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Cycling with Damsels
Wayne Sallee wrote:
Don't count on it :-) Isn't that the truth! |
Cycling with Damsels
I'm wondering if any of you managed to see my next post on Stars and
Clowns and Anemones. It sure didn't take long for me to have to eat these words. Greg KurtG wrote: Wayne Sallee wrote: Don't count on it :-) Isn't that the truth! |
Cycling with Damsels
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