First off, this is gathering reference for the future, I have no more room for a tank in my current bedroom.
My dream tank is a sea grass tank for the small species that can't be kept in most tanks; Bluestripe pipefish, teeny pygmy gobies, skeleton shrimp, maybe a few dragon eels, and various other things that will be eaten in most tanks. I'd also maybe like some seahorses, and I know a place that sells frozen-food-eating seahorses.
I know seagrass is picky and takes a long time to grow, so here's an idea:
Add a bunch of regular old inert sand to save on cost
Put that sea mud over the top of it for the bacteria and teeny critters
Add piles of live rock rubble in corners
Surround rubble with larger rocks to limit access to the rubble and let pods grow
Add a dose of those tibee (or whatever) pods that crawl on things
Plant sea grass
Plant pretty macroalgae (feather caulerpa? Something red?) on the rockwork
Add something like maybe an arrow crab that will be easy to remove and won't eat pods, just so I have something to look at
Hook tank up to a large 'fuge full of macros and live rock rubble with a grow light over the top
Let tank sit for a few months to explode with pods and grow the sea grass in
And then from there I slowly add things. I'll feed small, nutritious foods, putting them in an auto-feeder so that the tank gets fed a few times a day. Does this sound like it would work? Things would be done slowly, so the sea grass would have plenty of time to grow in.
This would be a fairly large tank, at least 45 gallons, and I'd use the largest 'fuge I could manage. Maybe a Rubbermaid container.
There might be a select few non-stinging corals, soft corals, but I wouldn't put anything mean in.
Things I'd want to try:
Garden eels (hence the deep sand)
Jawfish (so maybe mix some gravel in)
Skeleton shrimp
'Sexy' shrimp
Anemone shrimp
Squat lobsters (Technically not lobsters, very small and harmless)
One firefish, maybe
Bluestripe pipefish (can often be weaned onto tiny frozen food)
Some sort of less picky seahorse
Less picky pipefish, if I can find something more likely to eat frozens and if the tank is large enough to support a picky one
Very small shrimpgoby of some sort + a small pistol shrimp
Maybe a clingfish? (the long, skinny kind that looks like a living stripe with a pointy nose)
Assorted little sea-grass critters like chitons
Maybe something else small and gentle
My dream tank is a sea grass tank for the small species that can't be kept in most tanks; Bluestripe pipefish, teeny pygmy gobies, skeleton shrimp, maybe a few dragon eels, and various other things that will be eaten in most tanks. I'd also maybe like some seahorses, and I know a place that sells frozen-food-eating seahorses.
I know seagrass is picky and takes a long time to grow, so here's an idea:
Add a bunch of regular old inert sand to save on cost
Put that sea mud over the top of it for the bacteria and teeny critters
Add piles of live rock rubble in corners
Surround rubble with larger rocks to limit access to the rubble and let pods grow
Add a dose of those tibee (or whatever) pods that crawl on things
Plant sea grass
Plant pretty macroalgae (feather caulerpa? Something red?) on the rockwork
Add something like maybe an arrow crab that will be easy to remove and won't eat pods, just so I have something to look at
Hook tank up to a large 'fuge full of macros and live rock rubble with a grow light over the top
Let tank sit for a few months to explode with pods and grow the sea grass in
And then from there I slowly add things. I'll feed small, nutritious foods, putting them in an auto-feeder so that the tank gets fed a few times a day. Does this sound like it would work? Things would be done slowly, so the sea grass would have plenty of time to grow in.
This would be a fairly large tank, at least 45 gallons, and I'd use the largest 'fuge I could manage. Maybe a Rubbermaid container.
There might be a select few non-stinging corals, soft corals, but I wouldn't put anything mean in.
Things I'd want to try:
Garden eels (hence the deep sand)
Jawfish (so maybe mix some gravel in)
Skeleton shrimp
'Sexy' shrimp
Anemone shrimp
Squat lobsters (Technically not lobsters, very small and harmless)
One firefish, maybe
Bluestripe pipefish (can often be weaned onto tiny frozen food)
Some sort of less picky seahorse
Less picky pipefish, if I can find something more likely to eat frozens and if the tank is large enough to support a picky one
Very small shrimpgoby of some sort + a small pistol shrimp
Maybe a clingfish? (the long, skinny kind that looks like a living stripe with a pointy nose)
Assorted little sea-grass critters like chitons
Maybe something else small and gentle
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