It has been almost a year since I posted on this, time for an update on the 'no tangs' tank.
Touching a very large chunk of wood- I think the various algae stages in the tank has been going through are starting to fizzle out and my tank seems to be stabilising. The decision I made in the beginning not to add tangs (or big algae eaters of any sort) has proved to be somewhat challenging. Tangs, and their relatives, I think, graze away much of the algae before we even see it, by the time it is visible and large enough for me to manually remove, it was too late and I was always playing catch-up, especially with a tank the size of mine. Although I had lots of invert grazers (urchins, Mexican turbos, crabs. etc) I could never have enough, they just didn't seem to keep up, maybe they are just not mobile enough, and perhaps they eat only certain types of algae or only when it’s of a certain maturity. Whatever the reason the algae just ran riot. I faced either just letting the tank mature in its own time or bite the bullet and add a tang or four. I decided to wait and besides some of the algae stages looked attractive (the red hair algae and the ulva stages were particularly pretty).
Leaving the tank to do it's own thing has thrown up a few surprises-To test the tank when I first set it up I found a couple of small plating monti frags and a green acro frags in the LFS LR recycling tub both about as big as a thumb nail, despite them getting covered in various algae they have not only survived and have grown, I am ashamed to say nothing to do with my care. The small gorgonian has grown into a tree and I am especially pleased that ‘Keiths’ gorgonian (Keith was a friend who gave me a frag of it over 25 years ago and it has been part of my tanks ever since) has grown considerably and is starting to branch.
I think, at long last it may be time to plan the coral planting................I hope.