Hello!!! New to this hobby and need some serious help!!!

Anonda22

New member
Hello! We are 3 weeks in with our salt water tank... we unfortunately got advice from the people at petco and have had a very rough start to the tank life! After unfortunately losing a couple of fish due to adding to many at once we have backed off and working on getting the water correct! I have these little guys and im curious on what they are. (Pictures of what i am talking about). Currently i have one watchman, one clown (his partner died), one chocolate chip starfish, and 5 crabs. The other 3 died (again wrong info from petco). I am currently fixing the issues i have caused and these tank mates i have now are strong and bearing with me. So my question is what do i have on my rocks and is it harmful??
 

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First off, <img src="/images/welcome.gif" width="500" height="62"><br><b><i><big><big>To Reef Central</b></i></big></big>

The first picture looks like hair algae the second is a vermetid snail. The hair algae is signs of high nutrients more than likely not from your tank but the tank that the rock came out of, you'll want to get rid of that before it's too late. The vermetid snail isn't harmful but people try to keep them out because they spread and take over any surface.

When you have a chance read the stickies at the top of this forum, it is chalked full of great info for those that are new to the hobby.
 
Thank you so much!!!!! Sooooo, how do i get rid of these things?? I guess i dont mind the snails i think?? But the algae is the confusing part...
 
Thank you so much!!!!! Sooooo, how do i get rid of these things?? I guess i dont mind the snails i think?? But the algae is the confusing part...
Hi and welcome!!! I agree get rid of the hair algae before it really takes over....first things first though....tell us about your water....are you using RODI water in your tank? What are your water parameters? What kind of lighting do you have and how long is on? How many times a day are you feeding?

The easiest way to get rid of hair algae fast is to manually pull it out....then if any water parameters such as phosphates or nitrates are out of wack do a series of water changes to get them back in a good range....

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Once you can provide answers to Cancun's questions we can give you better answers but the easiest ways are manual removal like mentioned, frequent 10-20% water changes, don't overfeed, (feed once a day or every other) maintain nitrates between 5-10ppm, and phosphate around .03. With a new tank algae is part of the ugly phase so don't stress too much.
 
Once you can provide answers to Cancun's questions we can give you better answers but the easiest ways are manual removal like mentioned, frequent 10-20% water changes, don't overfeed, (feed once a day or every other) maintain nitrates between 5-10ppm, and phosphate around .03. With a new tank algae is part of the ugly phase so don't stress too much.

^^^^This^^^^^^
+ a lighting photoperiod which is not excessive 8-9 hours max, and use only the intensity you need, which at this early point is very low.

Master your water, know your parameters, cycle fully, add slowly so beneficial bacteria can adjust to the new levels...

Some LFS workers are good, some not. If your in a store that carries a TON of corals in big, clean well lit tanks, talk to that guy or gal.
 
Man, sorry to hear about what you and your poor critters are going through! As a rule of thumb, I usually recommend being EXTREMELY skeptical of anything a pet shop or animal shelter tells you about critters. Ideally you should've just started with live rock, plunked it in your tank, then let it cycle for several weeks before even thinking of adding any critters.

Like the others said, get those excess nutrients under control and your parameters are stable, consider buying a maintenance crew. I'd recommend a few brittle stars (avoid green ones as they will murder every critter in your tank), tuxedo urchins, blue-legged hermit crabs, scarlet reef hermit crabs (Paguristes cadenati), and maybe some fuzzy chiton. Eventually, you might want to buy a giant clam as those guys can really help control excess nitrates, but they need a stable tank with lots of light.
 
Personally, I favor snails over hermit crabs. Much better behaved, and mostly non-destructive. My favorites are trochus, nerites, cerith, and nassarius. All except nassarius with work on different algae. Nassarius are great for cleaning sand and very entertaining to watch "œarise" from the sand.
I avoid the large Mexican turbos, great eaters, but they bulldoze a lot of stuff around.
I also have a cucumber"”GREAT vacuum cleaner! I wouldn't put it in a new tank though.
 
Haven't seen your water parameters but I can tell you from experience that bio spira has kept ammonia and nitrites at 0 consistently. Nitrates are a different story though.
 
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