reeftofishonly
In Memoriam
Question regarding one of my wish, someone with close knowledge or having owned one are encouraged to reply!
I have had a clown tang for about a month now. He is roughly 5 inches long, and eats everything in sight. Loves seaweed, Mysis and squid. My tank has two pumps running from sump at 600 gal an hour. Both return lines break the water surface to create a tumultuous, wavy top water. I also have bio balls that seem to help oxygenate the water a little more by breaking, or shattering the water as it is falling.
Question is, given those circumstances, is there anything else I can do to avoid these fish from the apparent drop dead out of no where syndrome?
Ive heard they need high oxygen, which I feel I have, but as far as the whole cyanide deal where they come from, any other precautions.
I bought him from a store that had him two months, and he was clearly an aggressive feeder. He still is now, and kills the algae I put in, sometimes a 1 inch by 5 inch piece a day. I hope that helps keep immunity up to avoid other tang issues (ich, etc)
Thanks
I have had a clown tang for about a month now. He is roughly 5 inches long, and eats everything in sight. Loves seaweed, Mysis and squid. My tank has two pumps running from sump at 600 gal an hour. Both return lines break the water surface to create a tumultuous, wavy top water. I also have bio balls that seem to help oxygenate the water a little more by breaking, or shattering the water as it is falling.
Question is, given those circumstances, is there anything else I can do to avoid these fish from the apparent drop dead out of no where syndrome?
Ive heard they need high oxygen, which I feel I have, but as far as the whole cyanide deal where they come from, any other precautions.
I bought him from a store that had him two months, and he was clearly an aggressive feeder. He still is now, and kills the algae I put in, sometimes a 1 inch by 5 inch piece a day. I hope that helps keep immunity up to avoid other tang issues (ich, etc)
Thanks