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  #11  
Old 04-08-2013, 03:32 PM
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Coralgurl Coralgurl is offline
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I kinda already said this, but I went back through a thread from when my first tank was a few months old. I had added corals and they were NOT doing well. I was asking for help and below is some great advice I received.

It really can be a challenge to do corals in a tank under 5-6 months old. Some real pros can set one up and have a perfect tank within weeks - though this is the exception to the rule. Corals require excellent water, light, and only a little food. It takes months to determine weather a coral is happy in your tank as to how deep it's placed, the water flow has to be right, the water must be great, and the light good. This assumes the coral survives that long. And in a reef tank with fish, overfeeding of the fish can produce an environment where most corals will die, as overfeeding results in poor water/high nitrates or nitrites. Take things slower - do not add anymore fishes, or corals, and attempt to keep what you have alive for a few months. Check water parameters often, and do water changes when needed. Let your reef grow into YOUR desired looks, over time - rather than attempt a full blown complex system over only a couple months......a good reef tank regardless of size requires many months, if not years! I'm still waiting for mine to look like a million bucks - and it'll be 5 years from now.

this hobby is all about patience .patience and more patience....that being said a 6 month tank is a new born. after a year that's when it will really start to do its own thing and take care of itself. you can help it along with filters and skimmers. but nature needs to take its course over time.as the tank matures it will usually self correct except if you do something dramatic like add 5 fish at one time.it took me years to get my reef close to where i want it.
One of the hardest things is looking at others tanks and wanting yours to look the same (been there, done that). It will, but it takes time. Rushing into things is the fastest way to push you out of the hobby!
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  #12  
Old 04-08-2013, 04:21 PM
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JTang JTang is offline
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Fire me a PM when your tank is ready. One of my RBTA's is getting pretty big n might split anytime.
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120 Gal Reef (30 Gal Sump)
3 Tangs (Yellow, Hippo, Purple), Flame Angel, 2 Clowns, 2 Demsel, Six-line Wrasse, Strawberry Dottyback, Tube Anemone

46 Gal Bowfront Predator
Lunare Wrasse, Tomini Tang, Hawkfish, Snowflake Eel, Picasso Trigger, Valentini Puffer, Devil Demsel, Tomato Clown, Orange Urchin, 2 RBTA
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  #13  
Old 04-08-2013, 07:41 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jason604 View Post
Any have a bulb or retteri anemone? Or anything really pretty with nice color and size. Rbta? Please pm me with pic price and size. Thanks

My anemone decided to split and now I have three fairly large ones too, however Id wait a few more months before adding anemone's to the tank, just my 2c.
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  #14  
Old 04-08-2013, 10:42 PM
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yea i guess i will have to way a few months before i can get a rbta which i love! Jtang i will deff msg u when the time is right lol... how about clams and starfish? no brittle stars i want the blue or red...when can i get them?? i love this forum theres so many friendly ppl thats willing to share their years of experience to newcomers..
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  #15  
Old 04-08-2013, 10:52 PM
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Madreefer Madreefer is offline
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IMO I dont think your tank is near ready for a starfish of any sort. The reds or blues are difficult to keep. As for clams they need pretty good water parameters and decent lighting. I dont know what you have for equipment so I cant really comment. It's best to start researching all your livestock purchases before getting anything. www.liveaquaria.com has a good database of info to a certain point. Check it out. But some of the info is not always right but it's a good start to ryour research.
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  #16  
Old 04-08-2013, 11:10 PM
Ginu Ginu is offline
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+1 to the post above.

Never tried star fish but they also need a established aquarium. As far as clams go, I've killed two in a 34 gallon tank probably because the tank was to new.

Clams need very specific parameters, really good water, and have specific food requirements along with good lightning and a very expensive cost. If you decide to get one, I strongly suggest getting a 4”+ as they have the most chance of surviving. Also check about the supplements needed to successfully keep any form of clams.

My suggestion is to start small and slow to see how your tank takes it and read lots and lots when adding new livestock. Tank crashes are not fun and tend to be very costly.
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  #17  
Old 04-08-2013, 11:12 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Madreefer View Post
IMO I dont think your tank is near ready for a starfish of any sort. The reds or blues are difficult to keep. As for clams they need pretty good water parameters and decent lighting. I dont know what you have for equipment so I cant really comment. It's best to start researching all your livestock purchases before getting anything. www.liveaquaria.com has a good database of info to a certain point. Check it out. But some of the info is not always right but it's a good start to ryour research.
im running 10000k LEd fixture. Yea ill have to do a ton of more research lol, but its killing me with all this reading and school on top of that so asking experienced people is like a super short cut
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