Hi everyone,
I've been a member of these forums for some time, but I haven't posted. I wanted to say hi and tell you about my setup.
I have a 55G Fish and Coral setup that's being "rebuilt" right now. I managed to rid my tank of all algae except for a tiny bit of coraline. The tank looks like a reef in Mexico right now. I have a 12" carpet anemone that eats everything, my two true perculas, one false percula, and one very large maroon clown do not like the thing, and it recently attacked and killed my tomato clown. I learned that tomatoes and perculas aren't really a good match, so keep that in mind if you respond

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The tank is in range with salinity, my levels are perfect but for the Ph being at 7.8 (working on this). I just did a water change last week for the first time in a year (at which time my levels were perfect). I have about 3-4 watts per gallon in compact fluorescent (considering halogen). Temperature is regulated and water is maintained with a magnum 350 canister filter packed with charcoal and a prism protein skimmer rated for a larger tank.
I have some once thriving colt corals that are sloughing and very upset, they are getting real sunlight now, for about three hours a day (hoping this will help), but I can't get my three perculas to leave them alone! I think they are smothering the colts to death (pardon the super bowl reference).
I also have a dragon wrasse (very cool!), a sleeper goby, and the longest time resident is my hippo tang. Everyone is happy and I try to keep the tank as mellow as I can (returning fish that act aggressive). I think I've got a fully stocked tank (can I add any fish?), but I'm really excited that this blank canvas of 70lbs of live rock is ready for corals now that the algae is exterminated.
Any suggestions on easy care, mid to fast growing, bright and beautiful corals that I can add to this combo? Should I get rid of this carpet anemone if it doesn't eat any more fish? Suggestions (and scolding) welcome!
As an indication of tank health, the anemone has been doing well for about 2 years with no signs of stress (eating too well) and my feather duster has regenerated only once in that same period (also eating well). I feed dead phyto feast to the corals, silversides to the anemone, and frozen brine shrimp to everyone else.
Thanks to everyone for keeping this valuable resource in operation.
-Rossta