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#1
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![]() I have a rsm250. It has been up and running for 6 weeks. Finished cycling 2 weeks ago. It went through alot of brown algae followed by even larger amounts of green algae on most of the rocks and all over the glass.
Last week I was given advice from several different sources to add a cuc. Some said just add a few snails. Others suggested a mixture of criters up to 1 per gallon. (65 gal tank). I wanted to start slowly( as everything you read says "START SLOWLY") but against what I read I decided to put in half of the maximum. 12 snails(6 strawberry tophats and 6 trochus) and 20 hermit crabs ( 10 red legged and 10 blue legged). (I got worried about the amount of algae growing. Like a thick unmown lawn) At first everything went well. I spent about 1.5 hours acclimating them with drips from my tank into the water they came in and included a heater set to 80 degs F. I then carefully placed the cuc in the tank. They immediately went to work. The snails were going thru the algae like they were starved. The crabs looked like they were getting food as well. The crabs seemed to prefer being on the LR while the snails went everywhere. Each day the algae was being visably reduced. About day three I started to notice My first dead crab. I remembered that they need extra shells in the tank if they are molting, so went out and purchased several differnt sizes of shells. Each day since has seen fewer crabs, while the snails continue to eat the algae (all snails look healthy). Today one week after adding the cuc there is almost no visable algae, all the snails are still hard at work. All 20 hermit crabs are dead. Each day the crabs that were alive seemed content working to clean up the tank. The next day the ones that died, were just sitting in there shell not moving, after awhile the body parts (legs and pinchers) would just fall off in the water currents.(this took a day or two after they stopped moving). I would like to continue to build my tank, I want a coral tank with a few fish, but don't feel thats wise until I figure out what caused the crabs to die. In hind sight I suspect that there was not enough food in the tank to support the crabs unless they eat algae. But my suspicions are based on little to no knowledge. If they starved, will my snails be next? as the tank has almost no algae. When the algae is gone do snails need food added. ( I don't have any fish yet so no excess fish food available) tank conditions are as follows: Salinity = 1.026 Temp = 81.5 F pH = 8.1 NH3 = 0.0 NO2 = less than 0.1 or less NO3 = less than 5.0 Ca = 460 dKH = 9 PO4 = 0.25 or less Did an 8 gal water change last wednesday. lights 234 watts ho t5 mixed 12 on 12 off moon lights on all night carbon in with pump in back skimmer not removing much skimmate. some not much. If anyone has ideas as to whats happening in my tank, I would appreciate your experienced advice. thanks |
#2
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![]() Unless your cycle did not complete it is likely your hermits died of starvation.
Hermits are predators, they eat all the tiny critters that coral and small fish eat so they are never a good idea. Keep one or two and return the rest to the LFS. Your snails will die of starvation as there is nothing in your tank to feed them. Keep 6 or so and return the remaining ones to the LFS. If there is no algae in your tank soak some nori and place it on the bottom with a small rock to hold it down. Remember to resist the urge to go out and stock your tank with fish. In a couple of weeks buy a fish (ask here for advice before you buy) and only place one fish per month in your tank. A good reading source which you can buy at the LFS is Robert Fenner, the Conscientious Marine Aquarist. A great online source is www.wetwebmedia.com Good luck and thanks for posting. |
#3
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![]() Has the tank ever been treated with Copper?
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#4
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![]() there may have been something wrong with the crabs prior to putting them into your system. i would think that the crabs, if healthy to begin with, would have eaten the snails before starving.
just a thought |
#5
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![]() Quote:
thanks for your reply, it is hard to resist ( its like being in a Star Trek episode "Resistence is Futile") This is not a joking matter though, unfortunately there are no crabs left to return. My lack of knowledge and advice from people needing to earn a buck has led to an early failure. The snails have done such a good job cleaning I will have to start feeding them. I think I will see if I can return 6 snails. Or how many do you think I should have in 65 gals? I don't know what "nori" is. sorry. Where can I get some, I picked up some seaweed today that a LFS said the snails would eat ( he actually was the one LFS that told me to go with 6 snails only to start.) He seems like a very knowledable person, to bad I didn't follow his advice. I will look at the resources you suggested. I will for sure ask about fish here before I buy thanks again for your time. |
#6
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![]() zoaElite
I have not treated the tank with copper, all hardware is new, i don't know if anything can come in on the live rock? thanks for your input |
#7
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![]() Quote:
yes that was also the thought of a LFS I trust. He thought if they were weak to begin with there may have been a disease that took over. But his main thought also was that they starved. I have read that the crabs will kill snails for there shells. The snails I bought are alot bigger than the crabs. I don't know if that makes a difference. I really didn't think that I would have been sold something (really an obvious NEWBIE) without being told that I may have to supplement the food supply. I would have happily bought food for them. I guess I chaulk this one up to lesson #1 GO SLOW AND TRUST YOUR SOURCE Thanks for your input. |
#8
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![]() Hmmm, this is interesting. It doesn't make sense...unless we are missing some sort of pertinent information (that you may or may not realize lol). The hermits eat algae mainly, and should start killing snails if they are starving to death. As well, it should take longer than a week for the hermits to starve to death. If copper was the culprit it should kill the snails too, and probably be quicker than a week. My guess is that you may never know what killed them.
I agree that you should try to return 6-8 snails. While the tank is new you will not need very many critters to clean up. As you stock your tank, you will probably need to slowly add a few more critters here and there. A Fighting/Strawberry/Orange Lip Conch (sand sifting bivalve) would be a good candidate for your tank in 4-6 months when the sandbed has matured. |
#9
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![]() Agreed with Myka but to many people are supporting this 1 critter per gallon CUC rule and it's way over board.
IMO don't but hermits again they are not reef tank safe, now that your cycle is completed some blenny or goby and a few snails will work well for algae control. I'm a little baffled about the crabs though as hermits are far from finicky. I was helping Colby @ elite clean out all of the old snail shells from his tanks and I missed 3-4 live hermits out of a whole pail, after rinsing with BOILING hot water a few times and letting it sit for 2 days I found live hermits chilling on the top. |
#10
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![]() Quote:
Being new to the hobby, it is very likely I've missed something. I sure hope I didn't, but... The hermits appeared to be eating what ever they could find. It seems though that the tank was cleaned up so fast that the amount of cleanup crew recommended was to high. Now I'm scrambling to make sure the remaining snails don't die. The snails are cruising around the tank so fast, the crabs may not have been able to catch them. ![]() The fighting conch sounds like a great addition.( in the future) Thanks for your advice I will for suren take it slow from here on. |