30 gallon for Valentini?

thereefer9

Member
I was at my lps today and i came across a valentini puffer in a 45 i think. Spectacular fish came fight up to the glass in front of me. I was wondering if u could keep one of these awesome fish in a 30 gallon? If it was the only fish? What would the tank require?(ie equitment,live rock lighting) I really dont want to buy live rock beacause of the prices so could i just use base rock?
Thanks for the help.
 

scubaguy

Member
They can go in, I had one in a 35. Honestly LR is a must for filtration but some people do not and get buy. You need sand bottom and in dead sand then a scoop of live sand from a friend. Also depending on the puffer they like snails, crabs basically invertebrates. Mine did not bother most of my invertebrates but when I added a clam it nip it to death. Look around for LR I am sure you can find a good price plus you could buy 10 pounds of LR and 20 pounds of base rock. The LR will seed the base rock and make it LR. It will take a little while but it will.
 

tokey

Member
I have to agree without the LR a min of 35 lbs for a 35gal you will be asking for trouble. Live rock is your filter so it is a must get.
 

m0nk

Active Member
I second ScubaGuy on the "seeding" of live rock being a fair/cheap way to go. I've personally only used about 30% "live" rock when starting each of my tanks, and I'm in the planning stages of another where I'll do the same. Basically you get base rock (also called reef rock) which is basically just old, dried out rock that came from a reef somewhere. It doesn't retain the bacteria, coraline algea, or hitchhikers that live rock has (and may or may not look bleached), but if you have it in a tank next to live rock, that live rock will "seed" the base rock. Bacteria will build up in/on it, coraline algea will grow, and eventually you might not even be able to see a difference between the live rock and the base rock. It's taken about 4 months for most of the base rock in my latest tank to look like the live rock, but it certainly does look great. Anyway, it's a great money save since you'll usually spend less than half as much on base rock than you do on live rock. Hope that helps.
 
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