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#1
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My wife is dead set on getting "nemo" (personally I would rather get minnows
or danios). I would probably get the Percula Clownfish. I've already found some info on its requirements (pH, specific gravity, temp) Anyone got the details on these fish: Are they schooling fish?m What is the in min tank size and the # gallons/fish? How necessary are plants in the aquaium? How important is it to have anemone in the aquarium? What filter do people like to use for salwater tanks that are the size needed for these fish? I currently have a 29g freshwater tank with Pengiun boi-wheel fitlers on it, any problem in transfering a biowheel from that tank to a sal****er tank? Thanks, E.Otter |
#2
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Bio-Wheels can work for salt water, but you also need several other pieces
of equipment (protein skimmer, power heads, etc). You may also have to augment the bio-wheel with another bacterial filter or live rock to increase the filtering capacity of your tank. Sal****er tanks are much more complex (and expensive) than freshwater... be sure to read at least one book about sal****er tanks before you take the leap. Here are some decent books: "The New Marine Aquarium: Step-By-Step Setup & Stocking Guide " or "Sal****er Aquariums For Dummies® " Once you do get a sal****er tank going successfully they can be very rewarding... and much more interesting than danios. "E.Otter" wrote in message nk.net... My wife is dead set on getting "nemo" (personally I would rather get minnows or danios). I would probably get the Percula Clownfish. I've already found some info on its requirements (pH, specific gravity, temp) Anyone got the details on these fish: Are they schooling fish?m What is the in min tank size and the # gallons/fish? How necessary are plants in the aquaium? How important is it to have anemone in the aquarium? What filter do people like to use for salwater tanks that are the size needed for these fish? I currently have a 29g freshwater tank with Pengiun boi-wheel fitlers on it, any problem in transfering a biowheel from that tank to a sal****er tank? Thanks, E.Otter |
#3
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"E.Otter" writes:
My wife is dead set on getting "nemo" (personally I would rather get minnows or danios). But Nemo is so cute! I would probably get the Percula Clownfish. Ocellaris (the kind in the movie) is more common, and cheaper. I've already found some info on its requirements (pH, specific gravity, temp) Those parameters don't vary much for any (tropical) sal****er fish. You need to learn more about just keeping a sal****er tank at all. These clownfish are some of the easiest of all sal****er creatures to keep, but you still need a functioning sal****er tank. Anyone got the details on these fish: Are they schooling fish? Ocellaris is, yes. Other species of clowns may or may not be. What is the in min tank size and the # gallons/fish? You could probably keep on in a 5 gallon tank, but it's pretty hard to maintain stable water chemistry in such a small tank. People generally talk about "inches of fish" per gallon. It depends a little on what style of filtration you set up. With huge mechanical filters, you could pack them in pretty tightly. But many people these days prefer "reef" tanks, with natural biological filtration. You can keep a lot of corals with reef tanks, but only a limited number of fish (inches). You need to learn a lot more about any sal****er tank before that question makes much sense. But just as a rough guide, an inch of fish per gallon is probably an upper limit in a reef tank. And the clown fish will probably be 2-4" each. How necessary are plants in the aquaium? Macroalgae, not at all. If you have a reef tank, you'll get lots of microscopic algae growing on the sand, rocks, glass, etc. But you don't need to do anything special for them. How important is it to have anemone in the aquarium? Not at all, to keep the clownfish happy. (Tank-raised clowns might not even know what to do with one.) Your happiness is another matter. Many people (esp. having seen the movie) would love to watch the clownfish play in the anemone. But you need to match up the species correctly. And you should know that, while clownfish are some of the easiest sal****er creatures to keep alive, anemones are among the most difficult. For sure, you need _very_ bright lighting to keep most of them, as they get a lot of their energy photosynthetically. What filter do people like to use for salwater tanks that are the size needed for these fish? I currently have a 29g freshwater tank with Pengiun boi-wheel fitlers on it, any problem in transfering a biowheel from that tank to a sal****er tank? One popular method uses "live rock", "live sand", and a protein skimmer, with no biowheels at all. But there are other methods. It might help you get started to read an overview like this: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com...f/overview.htm Good luck, -- Don __________________________________________________ _____________________________ Don Geddis http://reef.geddis.org/ "So what do we do if we get bitten by something deadly, then?", I asked. He blinked at me as if I were stupid. "Well what do you think you do?", he said. "You die of course. That's what deadly means." -- "Last Chance To See", Douglas Adams and Mark Carwardine |
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