new carpet anemone

Hey just want to give you a heads up keep all powerhead intakes far far away. my carpet recently got slurped up because the suction cup came undone and the powerhead landed close enough to the anemones out stretched tentacles. Not sure if it is gonna make it!!! hope this helps save yours.
 
Hey just want to give you a heads up keep all powerhead intakes far far away. my carpet recently got slurped up because the suction cup came undone and the powerhead landed close enough to the anemones out stretched tentacles. Not sure if it is gonna make it!!! hope this helps save yours.

Deja'vu. I also had that happen once! pew.
 
Hey JMORE510 i stole ur thread..lol...

my bad. didnt know u would get mad cuz everyone answered ur question already and we have a 29 gallon in common, so i thought it would be helpful to u too.

ill start a new one.....sorry=)
 
Hey JMORE510 i stole ur thread..lol...

my bad. didnt know u would get mad cuz everyone answered ur question already and we have a 29 gallon in common, so i thought it would be helpful to u too.

ill start a new one.....sorry=)

haha no prob i was just looking for more answers. talked to a LFS and im just going to put him in the 75 and see what happens
 
jmore - there's a lot about water chemistry, maturity, and stability that test kits aren't going to be able to quantify. The balance of organisms (micro and macro) in a well managed setup will reach an equilibrium - given enough diversity is introduced either initially or over time they work together with the chemical properties of the water in the tank to give you the environment you need to keep these nems long term.

My $.02.

Good luck.
 
Yea I have 4 fish tanks and when I do WC I add the water from the 3 tanks to this one. Idk if thAt helps it
 
IME that hurts more than helps. The recipient tank tends to get dirtier faster and all the undesirables builld up. It's OK to start a tank with old reef water or go from a reef to a FO tank to a brine shrimp tank but I would not go from reef to reef continuously.
 
Agreed. On startup, donor sand/water from an established reef is a good way to get "cultured" water into a newer setup. But water changes (unless large as a % of total volume) are not a very efficient method of nutrient export, yeah I said it. It would replace trace elements, alk, ca, etc....but IMO the bulk of nutrient reduction/transformation happens via biological means. So algae, bacteria, sponges, and the like integrate waste into our systems. Some folks with some of best reefs don't change any water.....but I know I am not exactly breaking new ground here. That being said, most of us don't have reefs that reduce waste at the same amount we add it by feeding....so we change water to help. Walt's pointing you in the right direction. Personally, water from my SPS tank gets changed with new water. This "used" water goes to my anemone prop tank and then anemone prop gets drained into the lawn (keeps the salt cost down!). The prop tank grows fistfuls of halimeda and does run noticeably less clean than my reef, but I am sure bioloads/skimmers/etc are different between the two tanks so comparisons aren't apples to apples. HTH
 
I only said that 'cause I learned it the way I learn everything else... the hard way. ;)
 
I just added the water to help est the tank I didn't have any fish in there. But now I do I have 5 fish as well as lr
 
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