I will have to try that! Thanks
Dangerfish, This is a 75g tank???
Figure two good sized fish, and maybe two small guys.... EXAMPLE: Foxface, Humu, dwarf angel....... and maybe a goby, or two clowns, or a basselt or Royal Gramma.
Humu is okay for the 75g but it grows to be almost 10 inches. The big problem with them are that they eat the CUC, so maybe an urchin later on, to keep algae down.
ONLY 1 angelfish per tank, you listed 3, so pick only 1.
Wrasse are known jumpers. You will have to cover the tank with a mesh of some sort...NOT GLASS.
Foxface is okay.
I'm not sure about the eel, I never kept one. nor have I ever had a trigger, so I don't know if it will eat the smaller fish.
You're welcome. Let me add a little tip that makes it easier to get through the process. After opening in Paint and resizing it, click the blue tab in the top left corner, click on Save As/JPEG. Another window will pop up asking you to name it. It will have the original name highlighted in the File Name slot, but don't choose that as it will replace the original. Not good if you have to redo it, so click in the white area
behind the name of the original picture, and add a letter. I always use "a". Save it, and close Paint. The folder that the original picture is located in will be on the screen, and the newly resized photo will be beside it. Left click once on the resized picture, and look at the bottom of the screen. It should tell you the size of the picture. If it's 1 mb or less, this is the photo you want to use. If it's larger than 1 mb, delete it and start the process over, using a smaller number in the Resize/By/Horizontal box. You only have to enter numbers in the first box, and Paint will automatically adjust the second box. After you do this a few times, it gets easier, because you start to learn how much a picture needs to be resized just by looking at the original picture size. For instance: a 3.56 mb picture can be resized by 50%, and it will be less than 1 mb once it's saved. I know... the math doesn't match up, but that's just the way it is. Even a 6 mb picture resized to 40% is less than 1 mb. Crazy, I know... but I guess that's why I understand it. LOL!!!
If you want a predator tank with any significant number of fish, you should think about investing in a 200 gallon or larger tank. Aggressive fish are not the same as schooling fish, so they need lots of space. Like I've said before... you can put a 6' great white in a 6' tank, but he's
not going to be happy.