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#11
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![]() I also have made a resolution to never ever buy anyhting but fish and clean up crews that are capable of moiving aorund on its own. Never ever will I buy any mobile corals. Its a never ending hassle keeping them happy. If its not food its water if its not water its light, if not light its current flow, if its not current flow its location........the list never ends, and just when yu think they are happy where they are at, and re-arrange everything to suit "their" chosen location they pack up and move again. On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 07:55:08 -0500, KurtG wrote: RubenD wrote: Anemone, tough call. I got 3 bubbletips and they slowly die. They need good water quality, strong light, sometimes manual feeding, and most of all (on my case), Be far from the filter since they move a lot and get trap on filters/powerheads. I've lost two: One to predation and the other to a powerhead from hell (1800 l/hr now removed). So far, all are doing much better. The bubble tip is staying put, but the ritteri does move around. I have two smaller ones that the clowns ignore and they seem to have found a home and are staying put as well. --Kurt ------- I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know! |
#13
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On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 10:39:00 -0500, KurtG
wrote: snip . It's clown is bordering on a psychotic obsession (!), but it seems happy as well. The ritteri and others look great. --Kurt I have always viewed all clowns as being psychotic. They do suffer from excessive compulsive behavior ------- I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know! |
#14
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KurtG wrote:
Don't the live rock and sand cycle out nitrate as well? I don't know how much, but I'm hoping small water changes will take the edge off until the protein skimmer & bacteria can do their job done. That claim was made in another thread, but I've not seen this in my tank. Nitrates do get pulled out by plant matter, which is why many people keep mangroves in a refugium. George Patterson Forgive your enemies. But always remember who they are. |
#15
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Tristan wrote:
I also have made a resolution to never ever buy anyhting but fish and clean up crews that are capable of moiving aorund on its own. I think the moto is "don't fight it". They seem to have a mind of their own. I've been trying to reward them with additional light when they stay in the spot I'd like them to. But, they'll up and wonder for no good reason, but I reduce the lighting until they return. Then I increase lighting again. Don't know if it works, but it does seem to. --Kurt |
#16
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* George Patterson wrote, On 12/18/2006 11:27 AM:
KurtG wrote: Don't the live rock and sand cycle out nitrate as well? I don't know how much, but I'm hoping small water changes will take the edge off until the protein skimmer & bacteria can do their job done. That claim was made in another thread, but I've not seen this in my tank. Nitrates do get pulled out by plant matter, which is why many people keep mangroves in a refugium. George Patterson Forgive your enemies. But always remember who they are. Oh! Yeah! My mangroves started as stubs a couple months ago and are finally opening their first set of leaves. Have pretty good roots. Cindy |
#17
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KurtG wrote:
I have an anemone that didn't look so hot, so I finally sat down with a notebook and started working through my jr. chemistry set. Arg! Eye popping levels of nitrate! I only had ten gallons of water mixed up, so exchanged that. And, I put the fish on a crash diet. I've only had the protein skimmer running for 72 hrs, but that should help. All my other levels are normal except for Ca+ which is 600ppm. I'll continue doing water changes as soon as the salt water gets 24 hrs to stand. Anything else I can do? (Remember: I'm a newbie.) --Kurt Best thing for Nitrates is macro algae. They will absorb it (it's a fertilizer) If you have a lit sump or refugium, put some Chaetomorpha or Calurpa in it (Calerpa pulls the niates down faster, IME) Or you can stick either straight in your tank if you have no sump or fuge. Problem is your livestock may munch on it (less so with the caheto than the calerpa, but I have seen tangs munch on chaeto...) |
#18
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![]() Been there done that with calurpea. It can get to be quite invasive to the point its hold fasts get into liverock pores etc and it is just about impossible to get rid of. Chaeto is best to have unless of course you have veggie eaters like tangs, then they will keep the calurpea in check, and probably more than likely devastate it that it will not propagate to well. I do not keep large fish nor do I keep tangs, however I am partial to foxface / rabbit fish. n Wed, 20 Dec 2006 14:31:27 -0500, Add Homonym wrote: KurtG wrote: I have an anemone that didn't look so hot, so I finally sat down with a notebook and started working through my jr. chemistry set. Arg! Eye popping levels of nitrate! I only had ten gallons of water mixed up, so exchanged that. And, I put the fish on a crash diet. I've only had the protein skimmer running for 72 hrs, but that should help. All my other levels are normal except for Ca+ which is 600ppm. I'll continue doing water changes as soon as the salt water gets 24 hrs to stand. Anything else I can do? (Remember: I'm a newbie.) --Kurt Best thing for Nitrates is macro algae. They will absorb it (it's a fertilizer) If you have a lit sump or refugium, put some Chaetomorpha or Calurpa in it (Calerpa pulls the niates down faster, IME) Or you can stick either straight in your tank if you have no sump or fuge. Problem is your livestock may munch on it (less so with the caheto than the calerpa, but I have seen tangs munch on chaeto...) ------- I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know! |
#19
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KurtG wrote:
George Patterson wrote: Well, it won't really be quick. It would take 7 partial water changes of 10% to cut the nitrates in half. If no nitrates are generated in the meantime. Kick it up to about 25% if you can. Three 25% changes will bring it well below the halfway mark. Don't the live rock and sand cycle out nitrate as well? I don't know how much, but I'm hoping small water changes will take the edge off until the protein skimmer & bacteria can do their job done. --Kurt Only happens in limited oxygen envionment, Bacteria deep inside the live rock will do it, and deep in the sand if you have a deep sand bed... Bacteria that live on surface of rock and sand bed can't metabolize nitrates. |
#20
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Add Homonym wrote:
Best thing for Nitrates is macro algae. They will absorb it (it's a fertilizer) If you have a lit sump or refugium, put some Chaetomorpha or Calurpa in it (Calerpa pulls the niates down faster, IME) Or you can stick either straight in your tank if you have no sump or fuge. Problem is your livestock may munch on it (less so with the caheto than the calerpa, but I have seen tangs munch on chaeto...) Thanks! I'm working on a refugium setup. I thought I could postpone it, but in for penny in for a pound. I was hoping to feed my tang out of it, so that's good news. --Kurt |
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