jlinzmaier
Premium Member
Some have called it a cryptic fuge but I don't think the term has yet been truly coined. I'd like to create an area where sponges, tunicates, and other inverts can thrive. I'm hoping this area can become a refuge for various pods and other fauna as well as various species of filter feeding inverts. The goal would be to successfully create an environment for these types of animals so they can reproduce, assist with filtration of the water, and coincidentally the offspring, reproductive components, and fauna overflow can become a healthy and live snack for my corals and fish.
In my current sump I have various types of sponges which have grown on the underside of the rocks indicating they prefer low light or no light. Therefore, my thoughts on this project is that it would have very little light or light only in one area for a portion of the day. I plan to have various sizes of substrate including an area of 4-5 inch deep fine sand. I also plan to order some live mud from florida as well as some live sand from an indonesian supplier. I would think that would be enough to seed things and get some significant biodiversity. The entire space would be filled with substrate of varying depths and sizes as well as LR rubble as well as the upper space being filled with some LR. This entire tank will likely be a 75 or 55 gal tank and simply be branched off from my existing sump plumbing. The return from this tank would be via gravity to prevent any unecessary harm to any fauna heading out into the DT return.
I plan to feed this area frequently (daily) some live phyto (I'm culturing nano, tet, and isochrysis) as well as 2-3 times per week a large feeding of newly hatched brine shrimp. I'd also like to feed this are some sponge power by KZ. I have no idea if this stuff is snake oil or not but I'm willing to give it a go. I've heard good things about it.
Few questions for you experts on sponges, tunicates, and other such creatures:
What flow rate is ideal for these types of animals?? I'm sure it varies from species to species but give me a general idea of what I should shoot for.
Should I have an area of high flow rate and an area of low flow rate?
Are there any other details I'm missing to make this a successful and interesting endeavor??
Jeremy
In my current sump I have various types of sponges which have grown on the underside of the rocks indicating they prefer low light or no light. Therefore, my thoughts on this project is that it would have very little light or light only in one area for a portion of the day. I plan to have various sizes of substrate including an area of 4-5 inch deep fine sand. I also plan to order some live mud from florida as well as some live sand from an indonesian supplier. I would think that would be enough to seed things and get some significant biodiversity. The entire space would be filled with substrate of varying depths and sizes as well as LR rubble as well as the upper space being filled with some LR. This entire tank will likely be a 75 or 55 gal tank and simply be branched off from my existing sump plumbing. The return from this tank would be via gravity to prevent any unecessary harm to any fauna heading out into the DT return.
I plan to feed this area frequently (daily) some live phyto (I'm culturing nano, tet, and isochrysis) as well as 2-3 times per week a large feeding of newly hatched brine shrimp. I'd also like to feed this are some sponge power by KZ. I have no idea if this stuff is snake oil or not but I'm willing to give it a go. I've heard good things about it.
Few questions for you experts on sponges, tunicates, and other such creatures:
What flow rate is ideal for these types of animals?? I'm sure it varies from species to species but give me a general idea of what I should shoot for.
Should I have an area of high flow rate and an area of low flow rate?
Are there any other details I'm missing to make this a successful and interesting endeavor??
Jeremy