So since I added the two corals I've noticed all these interesting hitchhikers popping up on the rocks.
So over got the bristle stars in the display tank. And then I noticed the clownfish B picking on these lice looking things. Say a few scampering around the rocks. Then I opened up the refugium which I hadn't looked at in a week and BAM there's a war going on here. I see little green worms (1000's) on the glass, isopods EVERYWHERE which I identified as a beneficial Munnid-isopod, and spirorbid worms all over as before.
2 questions
1)Now there's is a healthy patch of cyano on a rock in the refugium. Do I need to clean this or worry about it overtaking the fuge and killing my Macroalgae? The tiny 1cm patches in my tank I clean during water changes.
2) do I need to do anything special to keep this biodiversity up? Or just feeding my two clowns will suffice? Are there any sorts of fish that become options to me now because of these things as a food source?
So over got the bristle stars in the display tank. And then I noticed the clownfish B picking on these lice looking things. Say a few scampering around the rocks. Then I opened up the refugium which I hadn't looked at in a week and BAM there's a war going on here. I see little green worms (1000's) on the glass, isopods EVERYWHERE which I identified as a beneficial Munnid-isopod, and spirorbid worms all over as before.
2 questions
1)Now there's is a healthy patch of cyano on a rock in the refugium. Do I need to clean this or worry about it overtaking the fuge and killing my Macroalgae? The tiny 1cm patches in my tank I clean during water changes.
2) do I need to do anything special to keep this biodiversity up? Or just feeding my two clowns will suffice? Are there any sorts of fish that become options to me now because of these things as a food source?
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