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You meant sea cucumber ?Time for some cuc!
Clean Up CrewYou meant sea cucumber ?
ThanksCUC = Clean up crew.
Snails, hermits, urchins, cucumbers, etc...
I'd recommend a few trochus snails for your glass and rock and some nassarius snails for the sandbed to start. I'm not a fan of hermits if corals are a priority. I regret stocking my tank with them and have slowly been waiting for the little thieves to die out.
This is a great cleanup crew, but probably a little early for a 3-week old tank. Keep siphoning your sand every week or so. Weekly to Bi-weekly water changes will help too. This is a problem that every new tank has and the only full proof way to solve it is time. Be patient and it will work itself outCUC = Clean up crew.
Snails, hermits, urchins, cucumbers, etc...
I'd recommend a few trochus snails for your glass and rock and some nassarius snails for the sandbed to start. I'm not a fan of hermits if corals are a priority. I regret stocking my tank with them and have slowly been waiting for the little thieves to die out.
No water change or siphon, just added clean up crew , now its 4 weeks exited to add corals
You're post is so right. There are so many youtube videos showing a developed tank after 4 weeks but we never see how they got there or what happen after. In this hobby the most prudent method to anything is time.I’ve been out of the hobby for about a decade, but I’m guessing you’re not suggesting the tank would be ready for SPS that early, right?
I always thought it was prudent to at least make sure algae had cycled itself away and coralline was beginning to cover everything, or is that just old methodology that nobody follows anymore?
Thanks!
I am having biocube 32, I dont think the lighting will allow me to SPSI’ve been out of the hobby for about a decade, but I’m guessing you’re not suggesting the tank would be ready for SPS that early, right?
I always thought it was prudent to at least make sure algae had cycled itself away and coralline was beginning to cover everything, or is that just old methodology that nobody follows anymore?
Thanks!
I already added the clean up crew but on 20% of what recommended for 32 gallon as due to lack of fish and coral I am not feeding the tank anythingThis is a great cleanup crew, but probably a little early for a 3-week old tank. Keep siphoning your sand every week or so. Weekly to Bi-weekly water changes will help too. This is a problem that every new tank has and the only full proof way to solve it is time. Be patient and it will work itself out
Thanks,I don't have an answer, but I have been thinking and reading a lot on when to throw the switch. on one hand you want lights off to give the micro fauna sufficient time to develop and establish footholds to battle the ugly stuff from settling in, on the other hand turning on the lights and adding nutrient and space consuming corals is a big part of that battle. of course once you turn the lights on the ugly algae is off to the races as well.
not so much with live rock, but dry rock makes this a much harder decision.
your rock looks like you made good choices
I would throw in 2-3 Green Chromis. They’re like $5 so they’re cheap sacrificial fish. Once you out in livestock your tank will cycle again and usually cause an ammonia spike. Give them a week or so to add some bacteria and nutrients to the tank and if your parameters are good, start adding fish and coral.I already added the clean up crew but on 20% of what recommended for 32 gallon as due to lack of fish and coral I am not feeding the tank anything
If I dont add any live fish for next 1 month or so do u think I need to feed something for the clean up crew to survive ?