dburr
Active Member
January 2002 Aquarium Fish mag.
Artical by Ron Shimek.
HERMIT CRABS
Although many people hihgly recommend these crabs as additions to a reef tank system, they are really not "reef safe," and their presence will significantly- and negatively- impact many other animals in the system. In nature, hermit crabs are relatively rare in reef situations, ofton being more common in the sandy areas near reefs than on the reefs themselves. If kept in large numbers in a reef tank, they willlikely do a loot of damage. Most of this damage will become apparent only after they are removed or die, and the tank recovers to a more normal situation.
A small number of hermit crabs are normal on a reef, and a few of these will do no significant harm to most reef animals. There should be no more than roughly one hermitcrab per 10 gallons of tank volume, and one per 50 gallons is a much better ratio.
He says they will damage sensitive corels like bubble tips and such.
Do you agree or not? and why?
Artical by Ron Shimek.
HERMIT CRABS
Although many people hihgly recommend these crabs as additions to a reef tank system, they are really not "reef safe," and their presence will significantly- and negatively- impact many other animals in the system. In nature, hermit crabs are relatively rare in reef situations, ofton being more common in the sandy areas near reefs than on the reefs themselves. If kept in large numbers in a reef tank, they willlikely do a loot of damage. Most of this damage will become apparent only after they are removed or die, and the tank recovers to a more normal situation.
A small number of hermit crabs are normal on a reef, and a few of these will do no significant harm to most reef animals. There should be no more than roughly one hermitcrab per 10 gallons of tank volume, and one per 50 gallons is a much better ratio.
He says they will damage sensitive corels like bubble tips and such.
Do you agree or not? and why?