I've never been a fan of highly stocked fish tanks. I've always imagined fish like there space and I don't want to overcrowd them. That said I've been having an issue with algae control. All my params are in line. I normally run about 10ppm NO3 and 0.07ppm PO4. I'll get a sea hare to knock all the GHA back, and the tank will look great, but then after about 4 months it starts creeping back in, and it's sea hare rental time again.
My darn yellow tang is spoiled for nori and other foods, same for my blenny. Neither are interested in the naturally growing green stuff anymore. However the tank is just over 3 years old, the last fish I added was over a year ago. Everyone in there is super chill, and the tank is very much 'coasting'. I'd really like to add something that I can keep long term that will help with algae control, but I don't want to screw up the vibe I have going.
The fish I'm looking at is a white tail kole tang. I have three concerns:
My darn yellow tang is spoiled for nori and other foods, same for my blenny. Neither are interested in the naturally growing green stuff anymore. However the tank is just over 3 years old, the last fish I added was over a year ago. Everyone in there is super chill, and the tank is very much 'coasting'. I'd really like to add something that I can keep long term that will help with algae control, but I don't want to screw up the vibe I have going.
The fish I'm looking at is a white tail kole tang. I have three concerns:
- Are they ich magnets like the powder blues or otherwise prone to disease?
- My yellow tang is a giant wuss, would the kole tang and he get along?
- Is my tank too open and not enough spots for the new kole tang to make his own?
- Yellow tang
- Starry blenny
- Pair of storm clownfish
- Coral beauty
- Ornate Leopard wrasse
- Mandarinfish