<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=11702925#post11702925 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Torpus
Yo Rex,
I've read a bunch of threads and I still dont know, should I have sand? It all seems like opinion. Bare bottom is nice but it still gets dirty.
yes. For me, I think those bare bottomed tanks look unnatural. For me, its aesthetic appearance, though it looks like bare is the new trend. The arragonite has the advantage of slowly dissolving and being a pH buffer and source of dissolve calcium.
And its harder to prop stuff up on.
yep
If I do have sand how many inches should I have. I remember when I had sand before I always had tiny little micro bubbles in it and slight streaks of light green. Is that good?
the bubbles are probably oxygen/CO2 coming off algae growing on th aragonite. Prob no reason for concern, except aesthetic reasons.
When sand stars and nassarus (i've gotta be butchering that name) are burring themselves in the sand are they eating? Or are they looking for protection? Lots of questions.
Sifting and eating. They really dont have many predators in the wild. Never a big fan of them though, since a Hawiian sifter grew very large and totally ripped into a beautiful cup coral...No star is absolutely reef safe.
Basically I just want you to tell me what the best sand sifter would be (assuming I need a sand sifter).
I like Nascirius for that purpose, and they are very cool when they surface to find food. Red footed Conch and Astrea do well to clean the reef. I also have a bunch of keyhole limpits which came is as hitchers, but are excellent reef cleaners. Some say these are not reef safe, but they only concentrate on algae in my tank. Dunno.
In our 50G bare bottom tank we have a five year old black bristle star a bunch of astreas a couple turbos a cleaner shrimp and an albino urchin (which eats coraline I think).
Never had an urchin, but they are supposedly good to control algae. I hear that they are bulldozers for moving rocks. Is that true?
I can't believe your cuke showed up after two years that is awesome!
Yes. because it would always be in the back, we referred to it as "the mysterious and elusive sea cucumber". When he showed up in the sump I had a good chuckle. I did wonder why that chaeto never over grew the sump, though...