Ok thanks. It's hard to look up what I'm asking. So many damn subjective answers.
Yes, I know. However this thread cannot be all things to all people, so we try to be highly focused on one subject only.
Ok thanks. It's hard to look up what I'm asking. So many damn subjective answers.
Understood. You've already helped twice for which I'm grateful.
I have a Solana 34 gallon (which is actually probably more like 29 or 30 gallons)
I have 2 snowflake clowns and a royal gramma currently (cleaner shrimp and emerald crab)
I'd like to add another fish or two?
maybe a mandarin? down the road a year from now? or is this too small of a tank? Not sustainable long term in this sized tank
What about a Catalina goby needs cooler water as it is endemic to California waters
or yellow wrasse? (needs a larger tank) or bangai cardnal? 1 or 2?
A single bangai cardinal or a mated pair (M+F) would work
Hello,
I set up a brand new 50g tank about 2 weeks ago. My first stab at saltwater. Started with just live sand and live rock. After a week, the LFS tested my water and said no ammonia or nitrate so I added a clownfish. He's been here for a week now, seems happy & eating etc.
I run 2 powerheads - Hydor Koralia Evolution 1400, and 750.
My light is an aquaticlife T5 HO dual lamp that I run 10-12 hrs a day.
Temperature kept at ~79 degrees.
Using a Reef Octopus BH100 HOB protein skimmer.
Got ~42 pounds of live rock so far. One of the live rocks has some Pavona coral growing on it. Also the live rock has plenty of life, seen a clam, a few small star fish, bristle worms, snails.
So this weekend will make 2 full weeks, is it time to add another fish or 2 yet? Here's some of my intended future purchases, I guess my question is which of these are the hardiest and/or safe for a newer tank. Also would be nice to add a fish that eats algae as there's a breakout of this orange/brown algae. Also want reef safe fish as I eventually want to add some easier coral at some point.
-Firefish introduce early
-Spotted Orange Goby
-Any type of Triggerfish? No, needs larger tank
-Any type of Tang? No, needs larger tank
-6 line wrasse or Leopard Wrasse six line wrasses are aggressive and will greatly limit tank mates, leopard wrasses are expert level fish requiring a mature, larger tank, and no copepod competitors
-blue dot jawfish needs cooler temperatures
Any suggestions/ideas very welcome. Also any suggestions on a good basic CUC and when to add it very welcome too. Thanks in advance!
29G tank, 10G sump with skimmer and Chaeto refuge, pods galore.
around 25 pounds of LR, 30 pounds sand
inhabitants
- 2 clowns
- 1 royal gramma
- 1 chromis
- 1 firefish introduce first
- 1 yellow watchman goby
I would skip the chromis, depending on clownfish species, otherwise, ok.
Probably at or above my capacity, but (fingers crossed) things are going ok.
Put in a cabbage coral, and (being dumb), did not clean all the algae on it.
I now have quite the healthy forest around it.
I pluck it, but it's sprouted up in another couple of places.
I'd like to get a Lawnmower Blenny to get it under control. another fish is a bit much for this sized tank.
Any conflicts?
90 gallon fowlr. 15 gallon sump. skimmer. w/d. Not my tank but they want some more fish and I'm trying to help them out with something blue/green in color.
Tank currently has 1 flame angel, 2 percula clowns (still young), 1 dwarf hawkfish, yellow tang (not a fan in this size tank based on guidelines, but it's still young).
Was thinking about a 6 line wrass will be a behavior problem with many fish going forward
or 5-6 longspine cardinals should be fine, but know that cardinals are primarily nocturnal and won't do a lot during the day
or both if possible. Any other suggestions for blue or green fish and provide more activity in middle of aquarium?
So this is an updated list for what I'm thinking about getting for 29 gallon biocube:
-green banded goby
-firefish
-court jester goby (rainiford's)
-and a sixline or chalk bass
I would skip the six line due to aggressive behavior; otherwise fine.
Responses/opinions?
So chalk bass?
55 gallon DT. Hob skimmer and refuge. 2 inches of sand in DT and 4 in the fuge with pods and chaeto. A couple of soft corals and zoas. Tbd on capability
1 clarkii clown very aggressive once sexually mature
1 spotted cardinal
1 green mandarin marginal tank size for this fish
1 bicolor dotty back aggressive behavior not consistent with most other small fish
1 purple fire fish
Around 10 assorted snails.
4 peppermint shrimp