SaltyMember
Premium Member
Hi, after a failed attempt to keep seahorses about 6 years ago I am planning to try again and avoid mistakes I made in the past. The primary cause of my problems, which I realize now, is that I was keeping my tank at reef temps. Over the course of a year I lost all my horses to disease.
So I know I have to keep my temp in the 68-72 F range. Is this correct for Erectus? My tank is in the basement with ambient temp of 70 degs. Do you thinki will need a chiller?
Tank setup: I have a reef ready 65 gallon tank. I have used live rock primary filtration in the past but am thinking I do not want a tank full of live rock on this setup. I am considering a few possible filtration setups.
Option 1: small amount of live rock in the display (maybe 30 lbs), artificial corals, 3 inch sandbed, caulerpa and other macros, wet/dry (well maintained of course) filter and skimmer.
Option 2: same setup except no wet/dry but putting more liverock in the sump so that the rock is primary filtration. My concerns with this setup are that liverock in the sump is messy and accumulates a lot of debris and I don't know if it is as effective for filtration in the sump as it is in the mason tank.
Livestock: planning on 4 erectus (all females) and cleanup crew.
Leery me know what you think and if you have any other suggestions.
Thanks!
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So I know I have to keep my temp in the 68-72 F range. Is this correct for Erectus? My tank is in the basement with ambient temp of 70 degs. Do you thinki will need a chiller?
Tank setup: I have a reef ready 65 gallon tank. I have used live rock primary filtration in the past but am thinking I do not want a tank full of live rock on this setup. I am considering a few possible filtration setups.
Option 1: small amount of live rock in the display (maybe 30 lbs), artificial corals, 3 inch sandbed, caulerpa and other macros, wet/dry (well maintained of course) filter and skimmer.
Option 2: same setup except no wet/dry but putting more liverock in the sump so that the rock is primary filtration. My concerns with this setup are that liverock in the sump is messy and accumulates a lot of debris and I don't know if it is as effective for filtration in the sump as it is in the mason tank.
Livestock: planning on 4 erectus (all females) and cleanup crew.
Leery me know what you think and if you have any other suggestions.
Thanks!
Sent from my DROID RAZR using Tapatalk 2