Not sure where it came from but I would keep the live rock -- you can use hypersalinity in a separate bucket to get nasties to evacuate, and then pick the inverts you want from the bucket after. If I had to do it over in my tank, the one thing I would do differently is start with at least some real live rock, like from KP or similar. I feel it's taken me a full year to develop a solid microbiome, and b/c I started w/dry rock I got here by adding stuff like copepods, PNS substrate sauce and AF Life Force mud, and I still don't think it's 100% comparable to just having started w/live rock.
One year in I am just now starting to believe that my tank will be able to support SPS corals. I don't know if I have any bristle worms b/c I haven't seen any yet, but just by adding corals and wild-caught inverts I've got a healthy population of amphipods, and occasionally find random stuff like a chiton hanging around that I didn't put in there. Point being, you'll get hitchhikers anyway -- it's not 100% avoidable.
Completely agree, quality live rock is the absolute best thing you can do for your tank. There are countless benefits, and the only negatives are easily managed. Personally, I will never start another tank with dry rock, the nuisance algae, likelihood of getting Dinos, the sponging up phosphates, the incomplete bacterial biome, the inability to denitrify, the increased time to maturity, and the lack of diverse microfauna are much bigger issues for me than a few hitchhikers. I quite enjoy all of the microfauna/hitchhikers, they’re half of what makes a reef tank a reef tank, a reef implies a complex ecosystem/food chain, without the microfauna it’s just a fish tank or a coral display.
That's true, I agree with both of you. I just ... don't want bristle worms. I may be able to figure something out. I like Live as oppose to Dry and I think I should be able to figure *something* out. Just need to think how I approach this. I was excited to find out I had a healthy amount of copepods in my 13.5 which is why I introduced a scooter. The benefits of live vs dry are pretty clear to me. I would remove an existing live rock and isolate it somewhere to start the process but I would kind of feel bad for the jaw fish that I currently have. He likes to dig holes and sleep under them.
One of the things I am excited about is actually having a strong supply of Coralline Algae that I want to eventually scrape off and introduce it to this. Not sure exactly how to introduce it to this or when. I'll do some research.
Just letting you know that this tank will not support the size of the blue tang long term.
Yes, I know. But it is a start. Better than an overcrowded Petco tank. Once it gets big I'll move it to another significantly bigger tank.