small alien
The fungus is among us.
Does anyone have saltwater acclimated guppies, platys, swords or mollies in your reef? Pictures? I'm thinking of trying a guppy. I'm a bit concerned about the flow.
Ive kept mollies in my reef before, they are fine with high flow. They are also good algae eaters
I would do this just because some guppies are very attractive. The only thing I would be concerned about would be the quality of life of the guppy or one of the other fish mentioned in salt water.
Saltwater fishes body are made to keep fresh water in and expel salt. This biological mechanism(osmosis) seems to be quite intensive, requiring specialized kidneys in salt water fish.
Brackish fish may be perfectly fine depending on if the brackish water they evolved from had a salinity high enough to allow them to prosper in saltwater. You would also have to take into account the reason they don't venture out of their brackish estuaries into the ocean from time to time. It may not be salinity related and simply has to do with the ocean lacking a suitable niche for these live bearing fish.
Cool thread by the way.
I used to keep mollies in SW a lot- I never acclimated a single one. They got lifted out of FW and dropped into the SW, didn't lose one
I will say I dislike having them in a reef-they are good for algae control, and I've never had a molly have any problem with flow (long tail guppies could have major issues,) but they are devistating eaters. The micro-fauna in my tank went from bountiful to zilch in a very short period of time, only recovering when I pulled them out eventually.
This is also a problem that I foresaw happening. Do you mean they just ate most of your copepods?
I'm currently researching the impact different salt water invertebrates have on beneficial organisms in reef systems. I plan on removing my peppermint shrimp and a pacific cleaner shrimp, due to the amount of beneficial pods, worms, polyps and other invertebrates that they prey on. The hermits may go at some point as well. It seems that many of the standard "Cleanup Crew" that hobbyists and pet shops tell you to purchase, end up removing a more valuable tiny and microscopic cleanup crew.
If a guppy does eat a large amount of pods, it will be removing the food source I reserved for a pair of manderin dragonets I plan on having.
Same thing I noticed for same reason- I was intending to have mandarins in the tank and they wiped out all the critters from Amphipod size and down. Flatworms, copepods, small brittle stars, all were gone from the tank. Only thing they didn't touch were bristle worms and their like.