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#1
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![]() I'd like to hear some success stories, what was the longest you kept this fish, what was the secret?
I heard these fish like open water, they usually hang out where waves crash and love high turbulent flow.... Please share your advice and pics!
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Always looking for the next best coral... 90g starphire cube/400mhRadium20k/2 XHO/2x27w UV/2x39w T5/ 3 Trulumen led strips |
#2
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![]() from what I have heard so far. they will do alot better in a 6' tank. bigger the better.
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150DD mix reef with 90 gal sump and 40gal frag tank purple tang, sohal tang, yellow eye kole tang, fairy wrasse. cleaner wrasse, leopard wrasse, and misc fish. GHL Mitras 6200HV X 2, MP40 X 2, MP60 X 1, tunze 6095 X 2, Vertex RX6 calcium reactor, Bubble King SM250, Aquamaxx bio pellets reactor, Profilux 3 |
#3
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![]() Im sure Marie will chime in about Doofus.
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#4
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#5
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![]() I can give lots of stories where I was unsuccessful....... unfortunately.........
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____________ If people don't die, it wouldn't make living important. And why do we fall? So we can learn to pick ourselves up. |
#6
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![]() Very, very few success stories. Doofus is a major exception and not the rule. Very much the ick-magnet. If its the only tang in the tank, your chances are increased.
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If you see it, can take care of it, better get it or put it on hold. Otherwise, it'll be gone & you'll regret it! |
#7
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![]() Quote:
You are right that they hand where the waves crash. A Vortech MP 40 or above set up at full speed and placed so that it just breaks the surface of the water may provide the highly oxygenated environment they need. Unless you are a similar set up together with a minimum 6 foot tank in fairness to the fish, I would not recommend you attempt to keep one. |
#8
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![]() I had one in a 6 foot 150 for 3 and a half years. His tank mates included: yellow tang, purple, regal, naso and blue throat trigger. These were only the large fish. When I upgraded to my 400 gallon, they all slowly died within a few weeks of the move. The transfer did them all in. Definitely my favorite fish. Whenever I decide to get one again, I don't think I will be as lucky!
Last edited by Fishfreak; 01-18-2012 at 12:35 AM. Reason: Forgot to add a word |
#9
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![]() 6 foot tank is nice but not a must, mine is in a 4 footer. This is what I find works good:
-Should be one of the first tang in tank -strong water current -Run UV before and after adding new fish for a few weeks -quarantine for the purpose of eating and not disease control Mine is living with a powder blue and amongst others for almost two years. Prior to this, I lost 5 due to to improper quarantine. |
#10
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![]() I had mine in my 94 gal tank for 5 years untill my tank was wiped out by a defective heater.
some key requirments are lots of O2, so oversized skimmers run 24/7 work well for this, 0 nitrates is another important thing I found out. the water must be very clean. as for 6 foot tank I will agree to disagree on that one. most of these tank sizes came from when people used to stuff a 100 gal tank with 200 lbs of rock, which resulted in almost no swimming area. I had 120 lbs of rock in my 94 gal tank aranged in a manor that 3/4 of the tank was open area. so my tank was 3 foot long, 2 foot wide and 25" tall. I never had any problems what so ever, no ich, no nothing.. I bought him.. took him home, dumped the bag out into my fish transfer strainer and put him in the tank. I did ballance the bag water to my tank first. I have never been a fan of quarenteen tank, I think they do more harm than good, and I never put any other water in my tanks. there was a good write up on them I found 10 or so years ago that atrubuted 90% of the problems people have with them were related to nitrates in the tank water. a low level isn't good enough, you must have none. the areas where they occure naturaly are not nitrate or nutrent rich area but rather the oposit. for food, I fed nori, some expensive pellet food, frozen krill, and the ocasional treet of baby brine shrimp. they are classed as a harder fish, but if you have a mature tank with pristeen water, lots of open swimming area, and lots of flow you should be ok. as for tank size.. I leve that up to the individual, but I myself having been sucessfull before, wouldent be oposed to put one in a a tank as small as 75 gal depending on the lay out. Steve
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