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Welcome to the Aquarium Forum forums. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast and simple so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.
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The most chatters online in one day was 16, 03-02-2012. TaylorM237 |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Hello Forum,
I have been starting to think about make the plunge from my FOWLR salt water fish tank and making it into a reef tank. It is a 30 gallon tank with 2 ocelaris clown fish, a firefish goby, yellow tail damsel,2 Scarlet leg Hermit crabs, and a turbo snail. I have a T5HO light on top. I was curious about what are some good begginer corals to think about adding to my tank, and if there are steps i could do to be more succesful. Feel free to add in any specific care guidlines, if any, for the coral. Thanks a lot. ![]() ![]() |
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#2 (permalink) |
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I as well would like to know more about this. Reef tanks are awesome and am currently building one.
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#3 (permalink) | |
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youtube.com/TheFishTeen
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Quote:
Should i start with a FOWL tank or go straight to Reef? Does a FOWLR need a protein skimmer?
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120 Gal. Reef tank coming this june. This is going to be awesome. |
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#4 (permalink) |
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I'm starting right into a reef. You can start into a FOWLR, theres no reason you cant... and corals are expensive sometimes so it'll be a slow build for those anyway. I just think a tank without corals and just fish looks a bit boring.. but thats my opinion.
A protein skimmer isnt necessary (it is helpful i hear, though) but you'll have to do more water changes and be sure not to get many fish for the tank. I'm planning only 2-3 small fish, more than likely 2, for my 20 gallon. |
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#5 (permalink) |
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I started with a FOWLR so i could take things slow. So many people are curious about this forum, but still no answer :(
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#6 (permalink) |
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Camron
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coral have 4 basic needs, water quality, food, light, and water movement.
water quality: trace elements calcium minuim 400ppm ideal 450ppm Strontium Iodine Magnesium Ammonia Should be at or near zero. Nitrite Should be zero. Nitrate Should be well below 10 ppm, but optimally as close to zero is best. Phosphate Should be below 0.3 ppm pH 8.2-8.4 acceptable range. Alkalinity 3.2-4.5 meq/L considered optimum. Temperature 80-84°F Salinity 1.025 to 1.027 (specific gravity of natural sea water) is considered optimal. Food Zooplankton Requirements vary by coral species and plankton type (Phyto, Bacterio, Pseudo, Macro, Micro, Nano, and Pico). Dissolved Organic Compounds Although some corals derive nutrients from broken down organic matter suspended in the water column, DOCs should not be allowed to accumulate in excess, as this in turn leads to the build-up of nitrate in the aquarium. The use of a good quality protein skimmer helps to keep DOC levels down. Light Requirements vary by coral species. Soft corals generally require less light, while those hard corals that live by photosynthesis need more intense light. For stony photosynthetic species, the lack of adequate lighting, as well as other environmental factors can result in coral bleaching. Water Movement Requirements vary by coral species. Some corals require a water surge to flush debris from their surfaces. Care should be taken when mixing different corals in an aquarium. As an example: some corals do not "play well" with certain other coral types in a closed aquarium system. Many soft corals (i.e. Actinodiscus) should not be placed near most LPS/SPS corals, as they may have a detrimental effect on some hard corals. It cannot be over stressed -- do the research before buying anything!
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10 Gallon Freshwater 2 Jumbo Neon Tetras 2 Scissortail Rasboras 2 Black Skirt Tetras 10 Gallon Salt Water Looking for supplies |
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