Red Sea Max Owners Club

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<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12178738#post12178738 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by RhinoCY84
I got a Deco Crab, a few Snails, and a Slipper Lobster along with my LR shipment from TBS. The LR has been in the RSM for a week, nothing really happened as far as any spikes, and I posted pics and perimeter figures earlier...So now what? Should I feed these guys, and what?
A slipper lobster is a cool water species and at 8 inches adult size could be a problem with its digging.

Donna, Yea, the paly colony is quite large. Hopefully I have found something that my urchins won't be able to tear out. The sides of the rock are covered in small clams.

It was a great low cost find that I was able to fill in the tank with and make it look a lot more mature.

I had to take the rics and zoas out of this tank because the urchins kept ripping them up.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12179317#post12179317 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by rob911
Actually, I have never cleaned them but it has been 2 months. I guess I will try that.

They normally don't need cleaning after just two months but sometimes a pump can suck up a piece of something and get clogged.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12179346#post12179346 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Brent F

Donna, Yea, the paly colony is quite large. Hopefully I have found something that my urchins won't be able to tear out. The sides of the rock are covered in small clams.

It was a great low cost find that I was able to fill in the tank with and make it look a lot more mature.

I had to take the rics and zoas out of this tank because the urchins kept ripping them up. [/B]

Brent are the palys in your tide pool tank? Did you have Tuxedo urchins? Too bad you had to remove the rics and zoas, did they go into a different tank?
 
Where have you been?

Where have you been?

<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12179316#post12179316 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by donna53w
Is the air intake tube (inserted into the side of the cup) the same air tube that would be hanging into the electrical compartment on my original RSM?? I also thought the air hole in the lid would be on the opposite side .. good thing you shared your photo!! :D
Donna
Donna - It is always a pleasure to hear from you! Happy that all is well... Now to be fair... Tylt33 only said that Nassarius MAY NOT be the best sand stirrers... not that he didn't LIKE them! Glad that you and I are founding members of the "Nassarius Snail Fan Club!" :lol:
A picture is worth a THOUSAND WORDS.... with the skimmer mod!

Brent F - Sometimes the obvious answer escapes us!!! :lol:
I haven't cleaned the impellers on my main circ pumps in the last 65 days! Who knows what I will find on those impellers that have been running 24/7... !!!
You are the MASTER of finding BARGAINS! The Palys are beautiful!!!
I thought your urchins were in your tide pool????

snake plissken Great FTS! That looks like a VERY LARGE and FAT CLOWN...!!! Is that a hermit down on the sand front and center?
Kent a.k.a. NaCl+H2O Fish
 
Hawaiian Brown Slipper Lobster

Family: Scyllaridae

Scientific Name: Parribacus antarcticus

Other Common Names: Sculptured Slipper Lobster, with all slipper species commonly referred to as "Bulldozer Lobsters".

Hawaiian Name: 'Ula-papapa, meaning flat lobster, with this name applying to all slipper lobsters in Hawai'i.

Distribution: This, as well as other similar species are found in Hawaiian, Indo-Pacific, Caribbean and tropical Atlantic waters.

Average Size: To about 7 inches in total lenth, but most are smaller.

Habitat: Less associated with hiding in caves and overhangs like others of its kind, the Brown Slipper Lobster can be found in the open on the tops of reefs.

Minimum Tank Size Suggested: 100 gallons or larger.

Characteristics: One of Hawai'i's most common slipper species, it is found singly, and sometimes congregating in small groups. It particularly blends in well with rocky substrate environments, and being camouflaged so well, this make it a difficult lobster to see.

Diet: Like all slipper lobsters, this species is a scavenger, and a carnivore that preys on small invertebrates and crustaceans, such as snails, clams, worms, crabs, and shrimps, as well as fishes, if an opportunity presents itself.

Reef Tank Suitability: Generally safe with all types of corals, but because of its destructive "bulldozing" nature it may topple rock structures over, rearrange or push corals around, as well as climb over them causing damage.

Although this lobster may be considered a somewhat smaller slipper species, in a crowded reef environment it tends to grow too large. The Brown Slipper Lobster is best kept in a tank devoted to it, or recommended only for a very large reef tank system.

**** I had to look this lobster up ... I am not familiar with it. Does anyone else have any experience with these lobsters??:confused:
Donna
 
Well, cleaned the heads and no changes. I wonder if the circulation will be ok with only 1 pump running with the addition of the 360 gph of the C-360.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12178738#post12178738 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by RhinoCY84
I got a Deco Crab, a few Snails, and a Slipper Lobster along with my LR shipment from TBS. The LR has been in the RSM for a week, nothing really happened as far as any spikes, and I posted pics and perimeter figures earlier...So now what? Should I feed these guys, and what?

Does this look like your Slipper Lobster?? I'm kind of thinking you may not want him in your tank, I could be wrong, but I posted info above this, just in case. HTH. :) Donna

slipperlobster.jpg
 
that clown is almost 4 years old. it came over from my first tank. only about 1inch when i got him. he is a real tough fish...been around a while and through a lot. he does have a few black spots showing up. what could that be?

my RSM is almost a year old. it did NOT ship with the air hose connected to the side of the skimmer cup. that was my own mod (of course i got the idea from this topic)

Red sea shipped me a new LID. it has the small hole in the left side, on the top of the lid.

in the FTS - there is a hermit front and center. there are also a couple of zooanthid frags "on the beach" that i got from alti's reef dot com
 
snake plissken: Yes, I agree!!!:D Your tank looks great! Did you buy your corals that size or have they grown a lot??? Lovely Zoas, I have the same and the colors show up very nicely in the tank, don't they??

About the tube going into the new hole drilled in the side of the skimmer cup ... is it the same tube that was originally hanging in the electrical compartment???
 
snake plissken: I'm also wondering about your coral that is top and center - green with polyps pulled in. Is that a Moon Coral?
Donna
 
donna - yes the tube is the same one that is usually tucked into the electrical compartment. it is the air intake valve for the skimmer. it runs up (along with the power cord) from the skimmer pump directly below the intake grate.
by doing this you actually create a "loop" the air going into the skimmer to create bubbles is the same air coming up with the foam and skimmate in the collection cup.
it sounded like a bad idea to me at first but i tried it...my skimmer was kind of loud and not producing any skimmate anyway...what did i have to lose?

the top middle coral is a green pagoda cup coral. when i got it, it was beautiful. now it has developed a "dead|" spot right in the middle. the edges still have nice big polyps/buds but the center is not so great. i have my hdor koralia nano aimed at it to try and keep detritus from settling on it
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12179583#post12179583 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by donna53w
Does this look like your Slipper Lobster?? I'm kind of thinking you may not want him in your tank, I could be wrong, but I posted info above this, just in case. HTH. :) Donna

slipperlobster.jpg
Yep, thats my magoo, lol
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12179710#post12179710 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by snake plissken
donna - yes the tube is the same one that is usually tucked into the electrical compartment. it is the air intake valve for the skimmer. it runs up (along with the power cord) from the skimmer pump directly below the intake grate.
by doing this you actually create a "loop" the air going into the skimmer to create bubbles is the same air coming up with the foam and skimmate in the collection cup.
it sounded like a bad idea to me at first but i tried it...my skimmer was kind of loud and not producing any skimmate anyway...what did i have to lose?

the top middle coral is a green pagoda cup coral. when i got it, it was beautiful. now it has developed a "dead|" spot right in the middle. the edges still have nice big polyps/buds but the center is not so great. i have my hdor koralia nano aimed at it to try and keep detritus from settling on it

Thanks for the clarification on the skimmer tube ... this is one modification that I am going to try (along with the hole in the lid). Your green pagoda cup coral is very pretty. I have something that looks similar, but was sold a Moon Coral. I'll post a pic tomorrow.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12179448#post12179448 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by donna53w
Brent are the palys in your tide pool tank? Did you have Tuxedo urchins? Too bad you had to remove the rics and zoas, did they go into a different tank?

Yes, the paly rock is in the tide pool with the clams and urchins. I have a Tuxedo and another urchin. The tuxedo is the worst for ripping zoas loose.
urchinpair.jpg


I moved most the rics to the RSM and most the zoas to the Nanocube 6. I just put a 4 - 5 inch sand bed in the Nanocube and will put a jawfish in there.

The only rics left in the tide pool are the ones the urchin hasn't removed recently (about 5 out of 20). One morning he had 3 rics on his back.
 
That tank has no coraline algae in it. The urchins keep the rock scraped bare. I feed them Nori as well and they are growing quickly.

The main thing I wanted in the tide pool is clams, urchins and flat montis. Since the urchins are there to stay I finally gave up having to glue rics and zoas back onto rocks every night. The urchins don't bother the mushrooms so I have teh big blue ones in that tank as well.

The colour of the rics looks beter under the RSM lighting than they did under the metal halide over the tide pool.

I really like the RSM but the tide pool tank is the one everyone looks at after a couple minutes.
 
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That's a happy looking coral.

I rotate between Coral Frenzy, Reef Roids and Phyto Feast for feeding my coco worm, clams, corals and rics. I like all three products.
 
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