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Old 01-14-2009, 11:14 PM
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I am not at this same level of experience to even be able to make much comment aside of the tank and fish are beautiful. As an observation from gardening though, we pick back buds, stems and stalks to enocourage more growth from our plants. We divide plants to allow them space to grow or they snuff themselves out. If we pick back one bud, two will grow back in its place. If we divide one plant we can make two or more, since it is not fighting for space and food.

Could it be possible that adding this fish to his tank will be beneficial to the corals growing in it, since the fish is essentially doing what a gardener does to promote growth? I dunno, it's just a newbie observation and I have no proof or knowledge that it might happen, but it could.
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Old 01-16-2009, 01:57 PM
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This is a picture took yesterday of my yellow mille. This coral is by far the fishes favorite. As you can see not much for polyp extension but still looks healthy.

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Old 01-16-2009, 05:51 PM
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Seems to be doing just fine. A little less hairiness is an insignificant cost to pay if the fish is doing fine.
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Old 01-16-2009, 06:32 PM
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Yeap, it's beneficial in my mind as I get better color from a lot of my SPS since some have brown polyps.
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Old 01-18-2009, 07:22 PM
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Gorgeous milli... and photo.
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Old 01-18-2009, 09:43 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by WuHT View Post
Corals look the same to me.

I suppose this is the difference between a pet owner and a gardener.
One can be both a pet owner and gardener... most reef tank owners seem to tend toward the gardener side, with beautiful aquascaping, colorful corals, etc. Those that don't have FOWLR tanks, where the fish involved would simply devour any and all invertebrates, and the aquascaping is lower-key but since the focus is the fish anyhow, this is rarely an issue.

All aquarists are both to some extent however... we want the best for the creatures in our glass boxes, but also want the tank to be attractive. The difference is in the pets... Chihuahua that eats plankton or German Shepard that eats chihuahuas? The chihuahua will do little damage to your garden, but a german shepard can destroy said garden in minutes.

Quote:
Originally Posted by my2rotties View Post
I am not at this same level of experience to even be able to make much comment aside of the tank and fish are beautiful. As an observation from gardening though, we pick back buds, stems and stalks to enocourage more growth from our plants. We divide plants to allow them space to grow or they snuff themselves out. If we pick back one bud, two will grow back in its place. If we divide one plant we can make two or more, since it is not fighting for space and food.

Could it be possible that adding this fish to his tank will be beneficial to the corals growing in it, since the fish is essentially doing what a gardener does to promote growth? I dunno, it's just a newbie observation and I have no proof or knowledge that it might happen, but it could.
I noticed the parallels between the two hobbies in the first 5 seconds of having a freshwater tank years ago... corals and many other marine organisms are just too similar to plants in many ways to not see other parallels. That's why I'll be mixing corals and plants in my reef
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Old 01-19-2009, 12:25 AM
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welll looking at this picture the fish looks healthy and well done Steve , love your fish. i think that this fish due to its color loves the yellow, orange, blue milli's that is why he is that color LOL
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