sarahkucera
New member
Hello,
I have a 7 year old 100 gallon reef tank that I got about 3 months ago.
The tank was (and still is) housing two hepatus tangs (6-7"), two yellow tangs (4") and two percula clowns. I have added a few other livestock, but they're all fine and happy.
When the tangs came to me with the tank they were all exhibiting HLLE, the hepatus much worse than the yellows. The previous owners had let the tank go to crap and had never fed them anything other than brine shrimp. They never even offered them any sort of greens.
The smaller of the hepatus is only slightly smaller than the other one, but he has it worse.
<img src="http://www.midnightmadness.org/sarah/saltwater/042306/IMG_1515.JPG" width=800 height=533>
They're better than when I got them, but I want them to heal up faster so they can be as happy as possible.
Is there anything else I can do?
Here's what I'm doing now:
One to two sheets of seaweed daily, offered morning and evening. The sheets are about 6 inces long and two inches across.
Mysis and brine shrimp offered twice daily,evening feeding heavier than AM feeding. I'm going to cut out the brine shrimp. I'm also going to start soaking the mysis in Selecon prior to feeding, I just picked up the Selecon today.
Cyclopeeze/mysis mix for the frogspawns and the mandarinfish of which the hepatus eat too.
Other creatures in the tank, all healthy and happy:
One 4" lawnmower blenny
One 3" mandarinfish
Two frogspawn corals
One small group of zoas
7 blue legged hermit crabs
3 astrea snails, 6 turbo snails, 12 (or so) cerith snails.
2 large serpent stars, maybe 6 -8 inches across fully extended
1 Sand sifting sea star about 4 inches across.
There are a ton of pods in the tank and also there are a bunch of bristleworms.
Here are my tank info and parameters.
100 gallon RR Oceanic with two corner overflows.
3 inches of sand bed/crushed coral bed.
Approx 125 lbs of live Fiji rock.
Huge sump, takes up half the cabinet.
Huge Skimmer, although I don't know the name of it.
4x96 CSL PC lighting, lighting on from 8:30AM to 10PM.
ph 8.2
nitrates 20mg/liter
nitrites 0
ammonia 0
salinity is 1.023
20 - 25% water changes done once monthly
I use Oceanic Sea Salt for the mixing.
Thanks for any advice, or anyone just saying for me to be patient and it'll take a while to heal up. I'm probably being pretty impatient, I know they're not going to heal overnight. But I sure wish they would start looking a lot better. I love them and want them to be happy in my house.
I have a 7 year old 100 gallon reef tank that I got about 3 months ago.
The tank was (and still is) housing two hepatus tangs (6-7"), two yellow tangs (4") and two percula clowns. I have added a few other livestock, but they're all fine and happy.
When the tangs came to me with the tank they were all exhibiting HLLE, the hepatus much worse than the yellows. The previous owners had let the tank go to crap and had never fed them anything other than brine shrimp. They never even offered them any sort of greens.
The smaller of the hepatus is only slightly smaller than the other one, but he has it worse.
<img src="http://www.midnightmadness.org/sarah/saltwater/042306/IMG_1515.JPG" width=800 height=533>
They're better than when I got them, but I want them to heal up faster so they can be as happy as possible.
Is there anything else I can do?
Here's what I'm doing now:
One to two sheets of seaweed daily, offered morning and evening. The sheets are about 6 inces long and two inches across.
Mysis and brine shrimp offered twice daily,evening feeding heavier than AM feeding. I'm going to cut out the brine shrimp. I'm also going to start soaking the mysis in Selecon prior to feeding, I just picked up the Selecon today.
Cyclopeeze/mysis mix for the frogspawns and the mandarinfish of which the hepatus eat too.
Other creatures in the tank, all healthy and happy:
One 4" lawnmower blenny
One 3" mandarinfish
Two frogspawn corals
One small group of zoas
7 blue legged hermit crabs
3 astrea snails, 6 turbo snails, 12 (or so) cerith snails.
2 large serpent stars, maybe 6 -8 inches across fully extended
1 Sand sifting sea star about 4 inches across.
There are a ton of pods in the tank and also there are a bunch of bristleworms.
Here are my tank info and parameters.
100 gallon RR Oceanic with two corner overflows.
3 inches of sand bed/crushed coral bed.
Approx 125 lbs of live Fiji rock.
Huge sump, takes up half the cabinet.
Huge Skimmer, although I don't know the name of it.
4x96 CSL PC lighting, lighting on from 8:30AM to 10PM.
ph 8.2
nitrates 20mg/liter
nitrites 0
ammonia 0
salinity is 1.023
20 - 25% water changes done once monthly
I use Oceanic Sea Salt for the mixing.
Thanks for any advice, or anyone just saying for me to be patient and it'll take a while to heal up. I'm probably being pretty impatient, I know they're not going to heal overnight. But I sure wish they would start looking a lot better. I love them and want them to be happy in my house.