lionstorm
Member
**sigh** Trying to lower my nitrates, I switched my ugf with cc to a 4 1/2 inch DSB recently, I have bagged crush coral in the tank to seed bacteria and help prevent another cycle. I have 70 lbs of life rock, maybe more, tank was established about 6 months in my house before the move, before that it had been set up 7 years and we didn't rinse the crushed coral or anything or let it dry out during the move so the bacteria was still very much alive in it and the levels of the tank were very stable for a long time.
My guess at first was the crushed coral causing the nitrate problems, as well as algae blooms gallore etc. Now I'm thinking it is probably over feeding so my question is this: I have a 4" Cinnamon clownfish, a 4 stripe damsel, a yellow tailed blue damsel, and a yellow chromis/damsel (do they even make all yellow damsels?) and a 4 1/2" Porc Pufferfish. I feed once a day a very light sprinkle of flakes, half a cube of brine shrimp, a small bit of seaweed/cowheart/seaweed/garlic soaked mix, and then a small part of shrimp/squid/crab/lobster/octupus all frozen but thawed when fed.
Is this way too much food? How often should I feed and how much?
Any advice would be much appreciated. oh a side note, its hard to resist those big pufferfish eyes when he swims right in front of the tank and begs.
My guess at first was the crushed coral causing the nitrate problems, as well as algae blooms gallore etc. Now I'm thinking it is probably over feeding so my question is this: I have a 4" Cinnamon clownfish, a 4 stripe damsel, a yellow tailed blue damsel, and a yellow chromis/damsel (do they even make all yellow damsels?) and a 4 1/2" Porc Pufferfish. I feed once a day a very light sprinkle of flakes, half a cube of brine shrimp, a small bit of seaweed/cowheart/seaweed/garlic soaked mix, and then a small part of shrimp/squid/crab/lobster/octupus all frozen but thawed when fed.
Is this way too much food? How often should I feed and how much?
Any advice would be much appreciated. oh a side note, its hard to resist those big pufferfish eyes when he swims right in front of the tank and begs.