With tangs, I think it's a good move, considering size, feeding, and aggressiveness.
In my opinion, tangs and large angels should be upped. Remember that these fish acquire "attitude" as they mature.
With tangs, I think it's a good move, considering size, feeding, and aggressiveness.
So Wandell, I'm going to assume that you were not one of the hundreds of hobbiests that have years of experience that SushiGirl was talking about that put the tang list together on RC. The list shows a min. of a 350gal aquarium for a Vlamingi, not 1200gal. After all of this, I have decided that no one knows for sure, and that I will start with a good sized bowl and work my way up from there until I decide the fish looks "happy". :spin2:
So Wandell, I'm going to assume that you were not one of the hundreds of hobbiests that have years of experience that SushiGirl was talking about that put the tang list together on RC. The list shows a min. of a 350gal aquarium for a Vlamingi, not 1200gal. After all of this, I have decided that no one knows for sure, and that I will start with a good sized bowl and work my way up from there until I decide the fish looks "happy". :spin2:
That assumption is correct, and the list is wrong.
I have 12 years of experience and have maintained a couple dozen full grown N. vlamingi for a few years--I have a pretty good idea of how much space they need.![]()
The RC recommendations are there for the benefit of those who care to use them, to help make their tang keeping experiences pleasant, less of a hassle, and lengthy. You will forever find conflicting recommendations on this because there is no hard and fast rule or formula.
The angelfish police is just me - a tiny voice against what seems to be the rest of the world.I think most of the minimum tank size recommendations for tangs should be doubled or tripled for some species if the fish is expected to actually grow to its full adult size.
One of my favorites is seeing N. vlamingii recommended for anything less than about 1200 gallons. I can only imagine someone making such a recommendation has never seen a full grown fish of this species in an aquarium.
Another pet peeve--why aren't there "angelfish police"? You can see people happily cheering on somebody's tiny Emperor Angelfish in a reef tank but these fish get nearly as big and require just as much space as N. vlamingii. There are only a handful of hobbyists in the world that can realistically hope to house this species in an aquarium once it is full grown.
There are so many fishes that for all practical purposes should just be left in the ocean. Maybe labeled by special order only. What I find is new hobbyists can't wrap their brains around the fact that LFS's sell tons of animals that are either doomed to die or are too big for anything but a public aquarium. And why do so many think fish will size themselves for the tank- where did that come from??And I would have to vote with Matt on this one. A full grown N. vlamingi will make a 1200 gallon tank look small. I have an acquaintance who has a 1000 gallon tank and that tank is not as large as one might envision when you start putting two foot fish in it. Still, when the RC members had the discussion, the sizes agreed upon were much better than any existing standards that I have seen. N. vlamingi is one of my very favorite fish and I would NEVER put it in my 350 gallon tank.
the angelfish police is just me - a tiny voice against what seems to be the rest of the world.
I've figured that out since I started the thread. Just in here there have been hobbiests that differ greatly from the RC recommendations.
Its all about opinions... and you know what they say about opinions " they are like <font size="1" color="#0000FF">profanity removed</font>", everyone has one. Keep in mind that anyone can make a claim on RC regardless on experience in the hobby, but it does'nt mean they know want they are talking about. Do your research, talk to people you trust, and make an informed decision on your own. Just because hundreds or thousands of Hobbiest have and opinion does'nt make it right.
I believe Scott Michael has stated what he had in mind with these tank sizes. I sure know he's been asked. Ninong may be quoting directly from the source.
I have spoken to Scott on several occasions about the minimum tank sizes in his books, and he has told me that many of them, especially for the larger fish, are smaller than what he would keep those fish in. One reason is to not undermine his own information. If he says you can't keep a yellow tang in a 75g tank, it won't be long before someone comes along and says, "See, I've keep this tank in a 75g tank for years, proving that there's no reason to trust anything in Scott Michael's books." Of course, leaving aside the ridiculously fallacious reasoning there, it's just going to create more hassles than it's worth, and it would serve to undermine all of the other good information in his books.
I have a hunch there was also some pressure from stores, etc to not make the tank sizes too big, because then they'll have a harder time selling fish, but I don't know that for sure, and I think (and hope) that Scott wouldn't bow to that kind of pressure, though it's possible the publisher would.
Sounds like you're hinting that Scott Michael is a puppet. Why would anyone believe anything else in the book if he admits that his recommendations on tank size for tangs is incorrect. I'm glad you brought up that it is Scott Michael's recommendations listed on RC. Other members have been saying that it is a collaboration of hundreds of members on RC that came up with the list.