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What Livestock Might I Add? (a bit long)
Hi all,
My marine tank is finally stable. It's in really great shape. I guess it is time to throw it out of balance again...lol. I'm looking to add stock and would appreciate your thoughts on an end state vision. I think I want a mix of Fish, Inverts and Coral. (in that order, if compatibility is an issues) Is this doable? Online Fish Stores write about Fish Only, Reef Tanks and Reef Safe setups. Does this mean you cannot have it all? I currently have a Tang, some Damselfish, Coral Banded Shrimp a Fiery Red Shrimp (it constantly hides), snails and hermit crabs. My main question: What live stock would be ideal to add over the next year? I'll add slowly over time so de-stabilization is minimized. Personally, I like my Tang (Toby), and the pair of Coral Banded Shrimp (Willie and Wayland). The Damsels were used to cycle...they are OK. (My fish are named after country singers, but that is another thread :-) I'm listing the following creatures so you can better know my taste. Obviously, many of these don't go together. Anemone/Clownfish Pair Long Spine Sea Urchin Big Colorful Wrasse...Maybe a Moon a Parrot Sand Sifting Starfish Blue Spotted Stingray Brain Coral Puffer Fish Lionfish Gobies Eels I posted my setup below to assist with any questions you may have for me. -- Marine Setup Fish: 1ea 5 inch Yellow Tang, 5ea Blue Damselfish (~1 in each) Inverts: 2ea Coral Banded Shrimp, 1ea Fiery Red Shrimp, 8 Snails, 12 Hermit Crabs... 155 Gallon Rectangular Tank (18 in deep, 72 in wide, 26 in high) Filters: Eheim Pro II Canister Filter & Dual Bak Pak Protein Skimmer 2ea 200 watt heaters Compact High Output Florescent Lighting Established on Aug. 18, 2006 Live Rock: ~10 lbs & a couple of "dead" porous rocks that I hope become live over time. 2 inches of sugar grain white sand substrate Current Conditions Really Great, Crystal Clear Water (finally) Temp: 78°F, pH: 8.2, Salinity: 1.025 Phosphates, Ammonia, Nitrite and Nitrate are all unmeasurable 8 hrs Natural, Non-Direct, Daylight (8AM-4PM) with 7 Hours of Florescent Lighting (4-11PM) Maintenance: Daily: Feed the Fish, 1 Thimble-Sized Cube of Various Frozen Fish or Algae Weekly: Water Tests & Empty/Rinse Protein Skimmer Collectors Every 3 Weeks: 40 Gallon Water Changes, Scrape Salt Deposits, Rinse (lightly) the Canister Pads & Gravel in Clean Salt Water & Vacuum sand if needed. As Needed: Clean Glass (now, about every 3 days) |
What Livestock Might I Add? (a bit long)
Paule wrote:
My marine tank is finally stable. It's in really great shape. I guess it is time to throw it out of balance again...lol. I'm looking to add stock and would appreciate your thoughts on an end state vision. I think I want a mix of Fish, Inverts and Coral. (in that order, if compatibility is an issues) Is this doable? Online Fish Stores write about Fish Only, Reef Tanks and Reef Safe setups. Does this mean you cannot have it all? What this means is that, if you add corals and live rock to your tank, the other inhabitants must be "reef safe" to some extent. You're used to checking to make sure that a new fish can get along with the guys you already have? This is an extension of that. Once you start adding inverts and/or coral, you need to figure out if your fish will eat them. Take a look at http://www.liveaquaria.com . The description for each animal tells you if it's "reef-compatible" or not. If not, it likely eats something you might have. Mix that with http://www.marinedepotlive.com . That site will tell you what each animal eats (among other things). The two combined should give you enough info to make an intelligent decision. Corals need decent lighting. From what you've posted, you have what would be called "intermediate lighting" on the Marine Depot site. Looks like that could support a brain coral. Frankly, it's a lot of work doing the lookups to see who eats who, and I'm not going to do it with your laundry list of "maybe" fish. If you decide to go further into the reef world, you might post to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs. Be prepared for a lot of suggestions that you change your equipment. A lot of people think that you can't keep any of this stuff without a ton of live rock, a sump, a refugium, and an RO/DI filter. George Patterson Forgive your enemies. But always remember who they are. |
What Livestock Might I Add? (a bit long)
George Patterson wrote: What this means is that, if you add corals and live rock to your tank, the other inhabitants must be "reef safe" to some extent. You're used to checking to make sure that a new fish can get along with the guys you already have? This is an extension of that. Once you start adding inverts and/or coral, you need to figure out if your fish will eat them. Take a look at http://www.liveaquaria.com . The description for each animal tells you if it's "reef-compatible" or not. If not, it likely eats something you might have. Mix that with http://www.marinedepotlive.com . That site will tell you what each animal eats (among other things). The two combined should give you enough info to make an intelligent decision. Corals need decent lighting. From what you've posted, you have what would be called "intermediate lighting" on the Marine Depot site. Looks like that could support a brain coral. Frankly, it's a lot of work doing the lookups to see who eats who, and I'm not going to do it with your laundry list of "maybe" fish. If you decide to go further into the reef world, you might post to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs. Be prepared for a lot of suggestions that you change your equipment. A lot of people think that you can't keep any of this stuff without a ton of live rock, a sump, a refugium, and an RO/DI filter. Thanks. I'll spend more time on those sites too... It would be cool if there was a collection of "setups" already posted somewhere. |
What Livestock Might I Add? (a bit long)
Paule wrote:
Hi all, My marine tank is finally stable. It's in really great shape. I guess it is time to throw it out of balance again...lol. I'm looking to add stock and would appreciate your thoughts on an end state vision. I think I want a mix of Fish, Inverts and Coral. (in that order, if compatibility is an issues) Is this doable? Online Fish Stores write about Fish Only, Reef Tanks and Reef Safe setups. Does this mean you cannot have it all? I currently have a Tang, some Damselfish, Coral Banded Shrimp a Fiery Red Shrimp (it constantly hides), snails and hermit crabs. I'm listing the following creatures so you can better know my taste. Obviously, many of these don't go together. Anemone/Clownfish Pair Good for a reef. Get a bubble anemone. Long Spine Sea Urchin Look for a blue tux, if possible. Long spines are OK. Big Colorful Wrasse...Maybe a Moon a Parrot No. Sand Sifting Starfish OK. Blue Spotted Stingray No. Brain Coral OK. Puffer Fish No. Lionfish Love 'em, but will eat smaller fish and any shrimp. Gobies Like mandarins? Good if you have a refugium. Eels I love ribbon eels. Great fish. Will get rid of your damsels and shrimp for you. Live Rock: ~10 lbs & a couple of "dead" porous rocks that I hope become live over time. Need a lot more rock, IMO. Mike |
What Livestock Might I Add? (a bit long)
Okay, over here in the UK we seem to be going down the Berlin style and
Ecosystem (Miracle Mud) are quite popular. Canister filters generally are frowned upon and regarded as nitrate factories, the jury is still out on that one for me, although I don't have one. My tank is filtered using 10kg of live rock on top of 30 kg of grotto rock (a man made sintered glass type material) which is extremely porous and allows colonisation of denitrification bacteria. I also have a sump which has about 3" of aragonite sand, plenty of caulerpa prolifera and chaeto. My stock is quite low and the water parameters are currently very good. I have recently added a skimmer to my sump in an attempt to draw out more "muck" before the caulerpa bed. What you want can be done without a sump, there are many members of a forum I use who don't have one, although some make a little refugium in the back of the tank to grow the algae and pods. My main question: What live stock would be ideal to add over the next year? I'll add slowly over time so de-stabilization is minimized. Personally, I like my Tang (Toby), and the pair of Coral Banded Shrimp (Willie and Wayland). The Damsels were used to cycle...they are OK. (My fish are named after country singers, but that is another thread :-) They will all be fine in your new set up. If you decide to grow algae, make sure you have an area where the tang can't get to it or it will disappear surely but slowly. The damsels may give any new additions a hard time when first put in. I'm listing the following creatures so you can better know my taste. Obviously, many of these don't go together. Anemone/Clownfish Pair Try and get a cloned bubble tip anemone as these are much more hardy than those taken from the ocean. You need to make sure your water parametrs are very stable before getting one and make sure when you buy it they don't rip it off the rock as it can tear the base. If necessary, take the rock it is on as well. With the clowns, there are many varieties of tank bred fish out there now, much easier to acclimatise to your aquarium, although they may not accept the anemone and host something else instead. Long Spine Sea Urchin If you get an urchin, make sure your rockwork is solid!! I have one and every morning my rockwork has been re- arranged as it wanders around at night. They will also strip your live rock of coralline alge, they love it!! Big Colorful Wrasse...Maybe a Moon a Parrot Don't know Sand Sifting Starfish Should be fine, but don't put it in straight away. You will need to allow the sand bed to mature a bit and gain an amount odf critters for it to feed on. Even then, you may find it will exhaust the food supply and you will have to supplement its feeding. Blue Spotted Stingray Wouldn't have thought so. They have big mouths. Brain Coral You will need to make sure you have high enough calcium levels and a high enough level of lighting. Puffer Fish Not if you want to keep corals and shrimp. Your coral bandeds will make a nice snack and they nip at the polyps until there is nothing left. Lionfish Beautiful fish but not for a reef tank. They are messy eaters and produce a lot of waste. I believe all of these are wild caught fish and have to adapt to eating dead foods in the aquarium which can be difficult to train them to do. I realise over the pond, it is more acceptable to use feeder fish, but it is not something I would do personally. Gobies True gobies should be okay. Blue cheeked will compete with your sand sifting star and a lot slowly starve once there are no more pods. Manadarins again need a supply of pods, although you can get them to eat brine shrip, mysis and flake as long as they are not too emaciated when you buy them. Gobies are also slow eaters, so you may find that the clowns, tang, etc get to the food before them. This happened to my yellow clown gobyand I realised too late to save it. Eels Again, messy eaters and not really recommended for the reef, although it has been done. It would be cool if there was a collection of "setups" already posted somewhere. I have been documenting my current marine set up from scratch, it can be found at www.marksfish.me.uk. It may give you some pointers and help you to avoid some of the common pitfalls. HTH Mark |
What Livestock Might I Add? (a bit long)
Marksfish wrote: I have been documenting my current marine set up from scratch, it can be found at www.marksfish.me.uk. It may give you some pointers and help you to avoid some of the common pitfalls. Ok all, This is great ...and very helpful. So far I could add more Live Rock (expensive), a Bubble Anemone/Clownfish Pair, a couple Long Spine Sea Urchins, a Sand Sifting Starfish, some Brain Coral and a Goby to live somewhat peacefully with my Tang, Damsels, Shrimp, Snails & Hermit Crabs. This could be a nice, reasonable strategy for the next several months...costing about $500-$600 USD. Any other creatures worth investigating? |
What Livestock Might I Add? (a bit long)
Any other creatures worth investigating?
Don't forget your clean up crew!! Brittle star, hermits, turbo snails, nassaurius snails, ceriths. All keep the sand turned and detritus consumed. Many of the soft corals and polyps are just as colourful as the hard corals, and easier to keep too! Pulsing xenia Colt coral Pussy coral Yellow polyps Mushroom polyps Furry mushrooms Many more too!! Mark |
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