lesleybird
Active Member
With all the live rock and live sand you will not see much of a cycle if at all. I have done two tanks in which I used all live sand and lots of fully curred live rock that did not cycle (amonia and nitrite never went above 0) and I put a very low bioload in from day one and did not loose anything. My LFS guy calls it luck. Well I also used a lot of the cycle bacteria in a bottle and did frequent (weekly) 20 to 25 percent water changes for the first 4 or 5 weeks. Luck? I don't know. I have two pygme angels and a majestic angelfish...they aren't suppose to be hearty fish. I don't recommend to anyone to do as I did. I certainly would not put too much in there too soon. My favorite thing to start a tank like yours is to put in the hermit crabs and snails at this time. Make sure that you feed them some sinking fish food pellets as they normally get fed from what fish leave behind. I would have the clean up crew (leave out the less hardy shrimp at this time) in the tank and feed them daily for a couple of weeks before adding any fish. Feeding the fish food daily will give the good bacteria in the tank to multiply as you want to happen in a new tank. You could add a hearty fish now like a damsel, but the problem with them is they can be kind of mean to other fish, and unless you intend to keep them they are almost impossible to remove from the tank without taking all your live rock out. After a couple of weeks of the clean up crew I would add a fish or two of what you intend to keep in there for good. Put in the least agressive and least territorial fish in first...And don't buy any fish until you can answer these questions about it. 1. What does it eat? 2. How big does it get, and is my tank big enough for it to be happy in? 3. What fish does it get along with? Until you can answer at least these questions about a fish you have no sense to buy it. Don't trust your LFS person on this issue. Do a search on line before sticking any new creature in your tank. It will save you a lot of money and greef. Good luck, Lesley