<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14144872#post14144872 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by hobogato
decided to take the tank in an even more natural direction. cut the return flow down to one mag18 and the in tank flow down to two seio 2600s on a controller. the lps seem to be much happier. i also removed the skimmer and will fill that section of the sump with more macro algae. this means i will be running with no mechanical filtration - just the liverock in the tank, the 150 lbs of rubble in the first section of my sump and a 48" x 15" refugium (half barebottom with macroalgae and half 8" dsb with a red and black mangrove forrest).
current fish list (besides the three clowns that will go back to mike's tank):
purple tang
chocolate tang
yellow eye kole tang
striped dogface puffer
zebra eel
marine beta
flame hawk
two spot candy hogfish
cleaner wrasse
yellow coris wrasse
clown fairy wrasse
radiant wrasse
blue pencil wrasse
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14504051#post14504051 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Ken Griffith
Ace, you are a great engineer, and have an excellent sense of aesthetics! That is the best looking integration of an aquarium with the molding and decor of the room (two rooms!) that I have ever seen.
thanks
Sorry to see your troubles with your tank. If I may venture an observation, your crashes have always followed massive changes.
First you broke down the tank to get the damsel out, which stressed your corals and made them vulnerable to the worms.
actually, i didnt break the tank down, i just moved the live rock all around to get the damsels out. IMO that has nothing to do with finding AEFW again
Then, you put a whole bunch of new fish in at one time in December - including a 3' Moray (aka nitrogen blasting machine)!!! Fish mostly died in a month?
i didnt add the eel in december, i have had it in the tank almost two years. it was one of three that made it thru the anemone thru the seio incident. the fish i added were mostly tangs and wrasses - both of which can get very territorial once established. therefore, i wanted to add them all at the same time to try to avoid some of the established fish picking on new additions problems. they didnt die slowly, black ich appeared and within a week the fish that died were dead. i dont really think quarantine would have helped.
Two weeks after the black ich, you have another full load-out of new fish simultaneous with a change up of your filtration system.
Maybe setup a quarantine tank in the basement and bring your new fish and corals in one or two at a time. Quarantine them for a month or two?
thanks for the suggestion, but i dont have a basement and everything seems to be doing well now![]()