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12/13/2007, 04:46 PM | #1 |
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75g stocking suggestions
I already have 2 Oscelaris, would like to eventually have a community of
- 1 South Pacific Sailfin Tang - 1 Sandsifting Diamond Goby - 4-6 Chalk Bass How does everyone feel about that? Is that a friendly mix and is that too much of a bioload? |
12/13/2007, 04:58 PM | #2 |
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You'll be ok.
Just add them slow, a few weeks in between. And don't forget your water changes. They will be very important untill things find ballance. Lucky
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Fast women... Expensive hobbies... Whats left? Current Tank Info: 310 gal. mix-reef |
12/13/2007, 05:02 PM | #3 |
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Thanks and I'm in no hurry. I wanna do this correctly. Does anyone have any experience with a school of Chalk Bass? What would be an ideal number and what is their behaviour like?
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12/13/2007, 05:07 PM | #4 |
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The sailfin gets kind of big for your tank, about 16" long. It's minimum recommended tank size is 125 gallons
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Kirk Current Tank Info: 20 gal long mixed reef, 29 gal freshwater planted |
12/13/2007, 05:17 PM | #5 |
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otiso,
I saw that in the marine fishes book as well, and was concerned, but everyone I have talked to that has kept one, even in a large tank, had said that they have never seen one get that large. But as it is, I still I not purchased the fish yet, so I could be persuaded otherwise. Besides, I like them them better than the Desjardin. In the meantime, have fun Tang Policin'! |
12/13/2007, 06:29 PM | #6 |
goby girl
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Bemidji MN
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too much of a bioload with the tang. I'd go with a smaller fish-dwarf angel sized.
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my advice:walk away. do nothing. til tomorrow. if its still alive, it will hopefully be fine. If you do not see it, do not try to find it. it may be hiding. just LEAVE it alone Current Tank Info: starting over! 125 gallon. Soon to be home to Blackfoot clowns, A. nigripes |
12/13/2007, 06:40 PM | #7 |
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Wouldn't a good skimmer help deal with the bioload of a tang in a 75?
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Dogs - Man's best friend; entropy's greatest catalyst. Current Tank Info: Biocube 8 on the way! |
12/13/2007, 07:00 PM | #8 |
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With all respect ernest. You posted a thread asking for opinions on your stocking list. When Ortiso gave his you slammed him. If you already made up your mind about your stocking list, why ask?
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12/13/2007, 07:14 PM | #9 |
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Sounds like it might be a little boring. The clowns will wiggle in a corner, the goby will stick his head out from under a rock, and your left with 6 small basslets and a tang. Bio-load and space-wise I think you are alright, but the tang might need a bit more swimming room.
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If it's worth doing, it's worth doing right. I remember when zoanthids were called things like "green" and "orange" and not "reverse gorilla nipple." Current Tank Info: 180g reef with all the bells and whistles |
12/13/2007, 07:20 PM | #10 |
goby girl
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with a good skimmer, yes it would help. But I still say a dwarf angel would be better long term.
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my advice:walk away. do nothing. til tomorrow. if its still alive, it will hopefully be fine. If you do not see it, do not try to find it. it may be hiding. just LEAVE it alone Current Tank Info: starting over! 125 gallon. Soon to be home to Blackfoot clowns, A. nigripes |
12/13/2007, 07:21 PM | #11 | |
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Quote:
Back to the subject. Housing one nemo for 4 weeks now. Healthy as can be. Yay me. Went to lfs 2 weeks ago for some supplies with no intent to buy anything else. Saw some beat up fish....fins mangled etc. Pulled out the marine fishes book and read up while there. Decided to orphan anny what turned out to be a sailfin. In two weeks it has bloomed to full form, losing any of the battle scars on the side, and also 99 percent healing on all his opening fins 360 degrees around his body. I've got a huge tank in the works for next year, but If this puppy gets large, I've got a circle of people more than willing to take it off my hands here in a network of salt keepers. I've seen sailfins about 14 inches in about 4 local stores here. They get huge. My next and only addition will probably be a risky smaller butterfly with caution coral type while i continue to coral and aqua scape my tank. As a new comer I've got the confidence my tank will be better cared for than someone simply getting credibility for owning a larger tank. That in which I can easily "flex" the same way in time and then some. Larger is better, but unfortunately we can not determine the quality of care simply by posts here.....maybe in established tanks, but not in newer ones IE the OP and even yours truly.
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72 Bow Reef, 75 FW Planted, 90 Acrylic tank being transformed to sump. Larger Reef in works. Current Tank Info: 72g AGA Bow (Current 4x54 T5, Super Skimmer 125, Mag 7, Hydor 3's x2, Kent Hi-S 60gph, 20G Acrylic Sump/Fuge, Dual Bulkhead Overflow, 80 lbs sand, 100 lb rock) |
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12/13/2007, 07:24 PM | #12 |
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Ooops, did not mean to "slam" him, I was actually just having some fun with the Tang Police comment. But if you missed it, I did invite anyone to persuade me out of the Sailfin, so maybe you should (prepare for a joke!) go back to watchin Dr. Phil reruns.
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12/13/2007, 07:30 PM | #13 |
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Lobster, I could see you scenario actually happening and that would kind of blow...Instead of a Sailfin, how about a Coral Beauty? Or should I stay away from the Bass?
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12/13/2007, 07:32 PM | #14 |
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Location: Massachusetts
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oh and for a skimmer i have an Aquamedic Turboflotor in sump. Thanks for all the suggestions so far...
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12/13/2007, 08:30 PM | #15 |
goby girl
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Bemidji MN
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go for the basses, and a coral beauty would be nice, along with any of the other dwarfs!!!
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my advice:walk away. do nothing. til tomorrow. if its still alive, it will hopefully be fine. If you do not see it, do not try to find it. it may be hiding. just LEAVE it alone Current Tank Info: starting over! 125 gallon. Soon to be home to Blackfoot clowns, A. nigripes |
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