Hello everyone! I am thinking about setting up a 10 gallon cold water tank, with lots of algae and some rock, and was thinking of stocking it with a rock gunnel, but I can’t seem to find any care info for these guys? Thanks!
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I haven’t kept that species, but related fish from the Pacific are pretty straightforward - feeding well on small krill and diced seafoods. Given this species shoreline habitat, I think you should cover the tank very well.Hello everyone! I am thinking about setting up a 10 gallon cold water tank, with lots of algae and some rock, and was thinking of stocking it with a rock gunnel, but I can’t seem to find any care info for these guys? Thanks!
I haven’t kept that species, but related fish from the Pacific are pretty straightforward - feeding well on small krill and diced seafoods. Given this species shoreline habitat, I think you should cover the tank very well.
Do you know their required temperature range?
Alright, I will probably keep it around 55-60 degrees. Thanks for the info!The rock gunnel is found in the coastal waters of North America and Europe. It ranges from Labrador and Greenland to Delaware Bay in the West Atlantic, and from the Kanin Peninsula to the Bay of Biscay in the East Atlantic. Within its range it is found from the intertidal zone to depths of over 100 m. Search averge sea temps. in these areas for a reasonable base temp.
Any of the lower temps than room temp can cause glass sweating I’m pretty sure. And yes material and thickness comes into play, acrylic tanks are better for less sweat and the thicker it is the better as it insulates more and sweats less.At what temperature do you have to be concern with tank sweating, and does glass thickness come into play? Just curious
I’ve seen 66 degree water in a tank with 3/4” glass sweat in a humid room. It is a function of water temperature, room air temperature and humidity, insulation value of the glazing plus air motion. Engineers can spec this out pretty well, but I cannot. I think the two factors they use is the dew point and the temperature of the surface of the glazing.At what temperature do you have to be concern with tank sweating, and does glass thickness come into play? Just curious