![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"but any Xenia elongata we've tried
to keep has withered away." Well what are your tank specs? Water peram., size , lighting, placement and current? |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 27 Nov 2005 04:27:03 GMT, wrote:
"but any Xenia elongata we've tried to keep has withered away." Well what are your tank specs? Water peram., size , lighting, placement and current? We have a 120 gal tank with PCs and actinics; I think the other reefer here (who's the mechanically inclined one) says our flow-through rate is somewhere in the vicinity of 800 gph -?- There's a pond pump down there in the sump, I think. We don't have a refugium. The substrate is commercial crushed coral, about 2-3 inches deep. There's an old plenum down in there somewhere, but it isn't connected to anything that would move water through it. I don't know how much in weight we've got in live rock ... it's a moderate amount, no towering reef wall. It's probably half the height of the tank, with several inches (ie, 2-3) on all sides adjacent to walls, and fair amounts of open space in it. We use the Tropic Marin Pro/Reef (?) formula salt mix, and supplement with iodine, Mg, and other sundry trace minerals twice a week. We start off with RO from our own system. Nitrate hangs around 20ish. No measurable phosphates, negligible ammonia. The temp stays between 78 and 80, and the SG (via hydrometer or refractometer) is pretty stable around 1.024-1.026. The Ca in this tank is in the 500 range, although the pH keeps creeping down. We add buffer every week when we do maintenance on the tank, and while it starts around 8.0, it soon dips down into the 7.8s, which I don't like. We've got too durn many fish, I know. Mostly damsels, though. There's 11 of them. Then there's 3 purple firefish, a couple clarkii clowns, a fairy wrasse, a cleaner shrimp, 6 Peppermints (although they're new, and it looks like maybe they're not going to survive the Cleaner shrimp - he hates them), and miscellaneous snails and hermits. Most of our corals are things like the Xenia, some Zoos, a couple tree corals, a flowerpot (who's lately unhappy and doesn't come out), a hammer, a frogspawn, and a torch, and several patches of mushrooms. Some Caulerpa prolifera lurking around the edges too. There's a couple Xmas tree rocks, who also have looked better. They seem to like the renewal of the iodine supplement, though. I try to be careful with feeding, but they're doing everything but sending up flares, always hungry. I feed them maybe every day, and certainly every other day with a variety of flake, granular, planktonic, and frozen foods. Sometimes they get a piece of raw shrimp or Nori. Other aquarium-keepers say feed less. The references say feed more. I'm trying to strike something in the middle, and the feed-ees are petitioning for more all the time. I'm not sure what else you need to know. If I missed a specific, ask. ~v~ =^..^= .... the problem with people these days is that they've forgotten we're really just animals. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Xenia elongata | exotec | Reefs | 2 | November 27th 05 07:21 PM |
xenia problems | Kelsey Cummings | Reefs | 6 | April 23rd 05 08:27 PM |
Snails, crabs, and Xenia dying | Andy Black | Reefs | 4 | May 27th 04 04:19 AM |
Xenia Question | Jonathan Cohen | Reefs | 3 | September 19th 03 03:56 AM |
Xenia Not Doing So Well | Brad | Reefs | 6 | August 1st 03 06:57 PM |