Hey thanks for the feedback. I appreciate your opinions. I hope that if people can't post a feedback, they'll at least voice their opinion in the poll. You know, I don't really know how I'll vote with this topic, to be honest with you. I'm not going to be a hypocrite, I have two small tanks going at the moment, so you'd think my choice would be easy, but it's not.
I believe small tanks, if maintained properly, could be extremely beneficial and further the knowledge of some species; by allowing more concentrated attention. My fear however is that these tanks, in the short run, will only further create demand for already hard to find/hard to propogate corals. Corals which will be added to too small a tank, too young a tank, and too forgotten a tank, and will die. You see it all the time on the boards: I've started my tank with borrowed salt water from my cousin's, friend's, brothers', next door neighbor's 40 gallon tank, so I don't need to cycle it--I'm buying an acropora tomorrow. What color should I get? When a generic "how to start a saltwater tank" on google will provide you with all the information you need. But I guess everyone has to start somewhere, and I hope they stick with the hobby and become lifetime supporters......a life time of propagation and breeding. But I hope they learn as quickly as they spend money. Maybe one day we won't have to pay for common discosoma which are priced to send the owners daughter to Harvard.
Can nanos provide the same reef saving break throughs that larger systems can provide?
and more importantly
Can we, as nano keepers, contribute and impact this hobby in a positive way with such small tanks?
I hope so. I'd like to say that nano keepers, on average, are more dedicated to their hobby than those with big systems which don't need to be maintained as faithfully as small tanks do. Which is why every LFS owner I talk with says eventually I'll get tired of the regular maintenance schedule, and either move to a larger system or exit the hobby all together.......and if that happens how can I honestly say to myself that I've improved upon this hobby? Shouldn't we gauge the success of our nanos, not by what we keep, or the density of fish, but rather on the age of our systems? What is the average age of the nanos on this board? Six months? A year? I hope to celebrate the tenth anniversary of my smaller tanks, not just six months or a year. If the average age of some plate coral on some Indo-Pacific reef is 7yrs, but there are several specimens in a 180g tank in Illinois which are 12yrs old, can we at least match those numbers in a 10g? These are the types of questions I'd like to attempt to answer, because as jacksdad stated, a lot of people use smaller tanks as "gateways" and any help in sparking the interest in this hobby should be pusued (by the way jacksdad, great initiative regarding the overflow regulator for the nano cube). That's it for me, for today. Have a good night--I think I'll do a water change when I get home :joy: