SeaHorseTim
New member
First, thanks for all the great information i've found here. I've been working with sea horses for a couple of years, but not with the depth of experience you folks have. I started with some dwarfs in a 24g nano, then moved them to a 55. But now I have a plan...
I recently acquired a 240 gallon tank, and I plan to build it into the wall. I'm going to turn it into a reef tank (it's a standard 96x24x24, great for a reef). Obviously, I'm going to plumb in a huge sump and refugium (is that what you guys mean by 'fuge'?). Conveniently, I have a large room to put all of this in, on the other side of the 'fishtank wall'.
Here's where it gets interesting. I would also like to build a pair of 29 gallon tanks into the same wall, and plumb those into the same sump, so that they 'share' water with the 250. And into those 29's, I would like to raise sea horses.
So, here's the question. Assuming I properly fill the 29's with the various sea horse needs, do you fine folks think this is a good idea? I like the massive filtration/consistency offered by such a large body of water, but i'm a touch nervous about the reef temp being too warm for the sea horses. I'm also wondering if any critters could transfer in and cause a problem.
If it works well, though, it would be one very cool wall to sit in front of and watch. Who needs cable when you have that much to look at?
What do you think?
I recently acquired a 240 gallon tank, and I plan to build it into the wall. I'm going to turn it into a reef tank (it's a standard 96x24x24, great for a reef). Obviously, I'm going to plumb in a huge sump and refugium (is that what you guys mean by 'fuge'?). Conveniently, I have a large room to put all of this in, on the other side of the 'fishtank wall'.
Here's where it gets interesting. I would also like to build a pair of 29 gallon tanks into the same wall, and plumb those into the same sump, so that they 'share' water with the 250. And into those 29's, I would like to raise sea horses.
So, here's the question. Assuming I properly fill the 29's with the various sea horse needs, do you fine folks think this is a good idea? I like the massive filtration/consistency offered by such a large body of water, but i'm a touch nervous about the reef temp being too warm for the sea horses. I'm also wondering if any critters could transfer in and cause a problem.
If it works well, though, it would be one very cool wall to sit in front of and watch. Who needs cable when you have that much to look at?

What do you think?