lcaldwell85
Member
Hello! This will be my first post to your community forum. I happened onto it after having a very unpleasant experience with another forum online from someone who obviously needs manner lessons, so I will repeat my question here.
I have a fully cycled 72 gallon bowfront tank, the last of the diatom just died off. It is currently housing a mated pair of false perculas, a coral beauty, and one green chromis (I had three because I had read they like to school in odd numbers, but unfortunately two of them died.) Everything in the tank perimeters are on point, the tank is staying a level 78 degrees, and salinty is between 1.025 and 1.026. There are also two peppermint shrimp, two small starfish (I'm not sure what sort. They're very small and are kind of a greyish green color. A gift from a friend with an established tank), ten blue legged hermit crabs, some snails, a lowlight mushroom, and two large rocks covered in yellow star polyps. I had a small outbreak of ich a few weeks back, with the coral beauty doing some random scratching on the live rock (which has stopped) and a small spot on one of my clowns that seemed to clear within two fresh water dips. I have only around 30 lbs of live rock right now, which I know is too little, but I'm adding a bit at a time. My question to the initial party was, how much live rock should I have for the yellow tang to be sufficiently happy in the environment? Unfortunately the entire conversation thread turned into me being barraged about putting Liverock from my LFS into the tank instead of putting in dry rock and curing my own. The general thought was that the liverock would die and create ammonia spikes in my water during transit. Is this really a problem when I only live twenty minutes from the fish store and they bag it in water for me? Aside from that, my initial question about the tang was never answered. Also, is a ten gallon too small for the tang to be happy in during his observation period? My hospital tank is only that large. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance!
I have a fully cycled 72 gallon bowfront tank, the last of the diatom just died off. It is currently housing a mated pair of false perculas, a coral beauty, and one green chromis (I had three because I had read they like to school in odd numbers, but unfortunately two of them died.) Everything in the tank perimeters are on point, the tank is staying a level 78 degrees, and salinty is between 1.025 and 1.026. There are also two peppermint shrimp, two small starfish (I'm not sure what sort. They're very small and are kind of a greyish green color. A gift from a friend with an established tank), ten blue legged hermit crabs, some snails, a lowlight mushroom, and two large rocks covered in yellow star polyps. I had a small outbreak of ich a few weeks back, with the coral beauty doing some random scratching on the live rock (which has stopped) and a small spot on one of my clowns that seemed to clear within two fresh water dips. I have only around 30 lbs of live rock right now, which I know is too little, but I'm adding a bit at a time. My question to the initial party was, how much live rock should I have for the yellow tang to be sufficiently happy in the environment? Unfortunately the entire conversation thread turned into me being barraged about putting Liverock from my LFS into the tank instead of putting in dry rock and curing my own. The general thought was that the liverock would die and create ammonia spikes in my water during transit. Is this really a problem when I only live twenty minutes from the fish store and they bag it in water for me? Aside from that, my initial question about the tang was never answered. Also, is a ten gallon too small for the tang to be happy in during his observation period? My hospital tank is only that large. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance!