Crawdads57
In Memoriam
It always struck me that there are so many small (~1" - 2") fish available for freshwater aquariums, but not saltwater. Now I know there are many small gobies for example and I have some of those, but I mean fish that "swim" like tetras, rasboras, etc, etc.
I realize that the lower oxygen environments where many of these freshwater fish come from is likely the reason for their small size, and that this factor alone is so much different than a reef habitat, but surely there are small "swimming" fish available for reef tanks somewhere.
Help me to fill in that mid to top level of my 15gal cube, so I don't have a bunch of fish running around on the bottom and hoping around on my rocks. Any suggestions would be great, but I am familiar with the standard chromis and damsels (which actually get fairly large compared to what I'm looking for). Basically, what is the marine equivalent of the tetras? That means that they can be kept in small groups, do not grow to more than say ~2.5" and are peaceful, swimming types of fish.
I realize that the lower oxygen environments where many of these freshwater fish come from is likely the reason for their small size, and that this factor alone is so much different than a reef habitat, but surely there are small "swimming" fish available for reef tanks somewhere.
Help me to fill in that mid to top level of my 15gal cube, so I don't have a bunch of fish running around on the bottom and hoping around on my rocks. Any suggestions would be great, but I am familiar with the standard chromis and damsels (which actually get fairly large compared to what I'm looking for). Basically, what is the marine equivalent of the tetras? That means that they can be kept in small groups, do not grow to more than say ~2.5" and are peaceful, swimming types of fish.