I'm new to the hobby, having researched and dreamed about it for years and years, and finally taking the plunge in April. It has been tremendously successful for the most part. My only issue is that I cannot seem to sustain a copepod population to save my life. The only fish I've had die on me turns out needed the copepods (I was unaware).
Details about my tank:
1) It was professionally set up by very knowledgeable people in the field. They've been doing it forever and haven't steered me wrong once. Things I've been afraid to introduce because of research they've assured me would work because they know what they're doing and have backed it up with their wallets, offering to reimburse me months down the line if anything went wrong. They've gone out of their way to guide me through this process, always available for my phone calls (and I've pestered them quite a bit), and are accredited by the better business bureau. If I seem like I'm rambling it's only because I know there a lot of people in the biz that seem to care more about their wallets than the health of their fish.
2) My tank is a 46 gallon bowfront with a ton of live rock. I know I should know the specifics but it escapes me at the moment. I started on 30% live rock (all Caribbean), but my tank has done so well that it all as been taken over by coral at this point and I'm assuming they could all be considered live. Very nice colors everywhere.
3) I have a lot of different kinds coral such a mushroom corals, gonoporias, etc. The fish I have (in order of tank introduction) are: 2 clown fish, 1 hippo tang, 2 neon gobies (all introduced together), 1 scooter blenny, 1 flame angel, 1 royal gramma. All of this fish listed here are on the small side (maybe even tiny) with the exception of the flame angel which is of medium size.
Problem: I can't sustain any copepods to save my life. It seems weird to me that with everything else thriving, copepods would not be, as the majority of my fish species do not eat them from what I understand. The professionals that help out with my tank are rather confused by it as well. The only thing I've had die on me was the scooter blenny. I was unaware that they ate copepods (oops) and I purchased another before I realized the problem. The professionals that help with my tank were so nice that they rushed over with some extra live rock and algae that was crawling with the buggies and put them in my tank free of charge. "You just let these sit in here for a month and bring them back after that," they offered, feeling it would set up a sustainable population. Keep in mind that my current scooter blenny is very, very small, but I still don't see these bugs anywhere! AAAH!
I won't lie, I'd LOVE to have a mandarin but can't even begin to think about that right now because I can't even sustain a teeny scooter blenny. Any ideas about what's going on in my tank?
One more thing: I don't know if this has anything at all to do with the problem, but my tank is a snail breeding ground. I don't get why, but I have microscopic, baby snails freakin' everywhere!
Thank you all so much in advance for any help you can give me.
Details about my tank:
1) It was professionally set up by very knowledgeable people in the field. They've been doing it forever and haven't steered me wrong once. Things I've been afraid to introduce because of research they've assured me would work because they know what they're doing and have backed it up with their wallets, offering to reimburse me months down the line if anything went wrong. They've gone out of their way to guide me through this process, always available for my phone calls (and I've pestered them quite a bit), and are accredited by the better business bureau. If I seem like I'm rambling it's only because I know there a lot of people in the biz that seem to care more about their wallets than the health of their fish.
2) My tank is a 46 gallon bowfront with a ton of live rock. I know I should know the specifics but it escapes me at the moment. I started on 30% live rock (all Caribbean), but my tank has done so well that it all as been taken over by coral at this point and I'm assuming they could all be considered live. Very nice colors everywhere.
3) I have a lot of different kinds coral such a mushroom corals, gonoporias, etc. The fish I have (in order of tank introduction) are: 2 clown fish, 1 hippo tang, 2 neon gobies (all introduced together), 1 scooter blenny, 1 flame angel, 1 royal gramma. All of this fish listed here are on the small side (maybe even tiny) with the exception of the flame angel which is of medium size.
Problem: I can't sustain any copepods to save my life. It seems weird to me that with everything else thriving, copepods would not be, as the majority of my fish species do not eat them from what I understand. The professionals that help out with my tank are rather confused by it as well. The only thing I've had die on me was the scooter blenny. I was unaware that they ate copepods (oops) and I purchased another before I realized the problem. The professionals that help with my tank were so nice that they rushed over with some extra live rock and algae that was crawling with the buggies and put them in my tank free of charge. "You just let these sit in here for a month and bring them back after that," they offered, feeling it would set up a sustainable population. Keep in mind that my current scooter blenny is very, very small, but I still don't see these bugs anywhere! AAAH!
I won't lie, I'd LOVE to have a mandarin but can't even begin to think about that right now because I can't even sustain a teeny scooter blenny. Any ideas about what's going on in my tank?
One more thing: I don't know if this has anything at all to do with the problem, but my tank is a snail breeding ground. I don't get why, but I have microscopic, baby snails freakin' everywhere!
Thank you all so much in advance for any help you can give me.