So when im ready to set up my saltwater tanks, can i set up my 20 gallon as a QT? And then just set it up as you would a normal tank. IE sand and live rock or do you just cycle it and thats it?
So for liverock in the 55 gallon, do i just add enough live rock to make it so theres lots of open areas, but still some liverock areas?
What are water change regime's like? Im aware that taking out to much is bad, but what if you over feed? Do you have to grab the food with your hands? How often do you clean filters, and how do you do it? Should i scratch off the salt rim and put it back in the tank?
Sorry for the question over load lol o and one last one is a T8 bulb ok or no good? Its about 6500K
Hi,
The QT questions the others answered. So I will jump in with the other stuff.
Over cleaning will kill the good bacteria colonies, (also depends on the type of filter) A canister filter should be serviced once a month. HOB filters: Once a month I remove the sponge and rinse it in the old saltwater that I just removed for a water change, and put it right back in, then I replace the carbon. Sumps can go many moons before you need to actually vacuum up the silt in the bottom that accumulates, but if you use a sock you should clean that once a week or every couple of days. Wet/dry filters need the bioballs rinsed the same way you rinse the sponge,
in old saltwater (freshwater destroys the good bacteria).
Set up your rock to look the way you like, you need enough surface area to allow the building of good bacteria colonies, and of course your critters need a place to hide and feel secure. Caves look awesome and the fish love them. I use décor as well as the rock. The only rule is to make sure it's very stable and won't topple over. Some folks even zip tie rock into place after drilling a hole. Black pond foam works great for attaching rock to each other...but only base rock, you can do live rock like that. If you kind of twist and move the rock against each other, you will feel it kind of lock into place and not move. Always build from the bottom of the bare tank, and then put sand around it, it's the safest way IMO.
Water changes are just that...you remove some water, and replace that same amount back into the tank. That replenishes the minerals and such that have been depleted, and removes some nitrates. In a SW tank the cleaning critters actually do their job. A Variety of critters make up our cleaning crew. Some are in the live rock, such as bristle worms, micro stars, copepods, isopods, amphipods and pineapple sponges. The rest we add ourselves and each do their own job, nassarious snails and brittle or serpent stars eat wasted food that fall into the rock. Turbos, astrea and other snails eat algae.
Your CUC (clean up crew) not only take care of algae and wasted food, but any fish that hides and dies deep in the rocks, are eaten before it becomes an ammonia generator. Otherwise every time a fish dies we would have to rip apart the entire tank to get to it. We certainly remove any dead fish we find, but once the tank is established, a sick or dead fish just disappears never to be seen again.
T5, T8, LEDs, Metal halides or regular fish lights...
There are corals for every type of lighting you have... not all corals need or want the bright lights, in fact, I think the non-photosynthetic corals have the better colors. So all you have to do, is select the right corals for the lighting you have. Nitrates are a problem for corals, but some corals such as Xenia actually need a little nitrate to live... but any reading over 10 is not good, a reading at 20 or above will kill them. Corals need to feed, and that pollutes the tank, and so requires more water changes...what feeds corals also feed nuisance algae, so always be careful of how much food you add to the tank. Some corals need to be hand fed, so you have to take into account all the things that coral needs before you buy it and put it into your tank.
So always do your homework before you buy any critter, or this hobby will get very expensive.
Macroalgae feeds on all the nasty stuff, such as ammonia, nitrites, nitrates and phosphates, it absorbs it to be able to grow, and once it reaches a certain overgrowth (all plants need to be pruned) you remove those elements from your system (called harvesting), keeping the water quality pristine. I highly recommend that one way or another, you add some type of macro to your system. A HOB refugium, or a refugium chamber in the sump, or Beaslbobs idea of a rigged version in the display using egg crate, or even certain decorative macros that can grow right in the display. An algae scrubber will do the same thing, it's only draw back is that
it must be cleaned once a week to work