Hi there,
I'm planning on a nano and I read most of the posts on the nano forum
and it seems that for nanos stocking is one of the most FAQs. And I
was thinking if we can come up with an approximative formula to
clarify stocking in a nano...
Something along these lines:
You can keep a nano in good health as long as you do 20% water
changes (with freshly prepared water) every week and your bioload does
not exceed your tank capacity.
Now to define bioload: for every inhabitant assign a tank capacity (in
gallons) that the respective inhabitant is messing up. I'm proposing
a few numbers here, just to give you an idea of how this works:
False Percula : 5
Clown Goby : 3
Firefish : 3
Zoanthid : 0.001/polyp
Mushroom : 0.005
Sun Coral : 0.2/polyp
Montipora Digitata: 0.001/cm
Mantis shrimp : 1
Turbo Snail : 0.1
Astrea Snail : 0.03
RedLegged crab : 0.05
BTA : 0.7
Clam : 0.5
If you're at half the bioload that your tank can sustain you probably
can go with 10% weekly water changes. If you're at double, you
probably have to go 20% water changes twice a week.
Notice that I'm not talking here about how much volume a fish needs
to feel well, but rather how much water it messes up. Hence a yellow
tang will probably be a 20 although it should not be housed in any
tank smaller than a 50 or 70.
I'm very new at the hobby and have 0 experience with the nanos, so I
can't make this list, but if one of you guys would put in the time and
effort to make such a list it would help a lot of people with stocking
questions.
I realize that the dynamics in a nano tank cannot be exactly captured
by a dry mathematical equation, however, I'm suggesting this as a way
to figure out an approximate ballpark, useful especially for
beginners. Of course, you'll get feedback from the tank itself that
will help you adjust your "calculation": if the algae get out of
control, your corals don't thrive, or (gasp) your pets die, your tank
is out of capacity although you may be "mathematically" OK.
If any of you guys with experience wants to take on such an endeavor,
I think that we should make this list as public as possible, perhaps
even publish it in a hobby's magazine (FAMA?).
In this case, we'll probably need some sort of validation for the
list. I suggest to look message boards on RDO, RC and nanoforums and
see good tanks and tanks with problems, compute the bioload capacity
for both and, hopefully, the tanks without problems have a bioload
smaller than the proposed limit and the other way around...
Any thoughts? Anybody's game for this? I'm willing to help with
anything I can (including suggestions and a validation of the list).
There is one more interesting data point: if one has a very low
bioload (say 1% of the nominal bioload), it should be able to go
without water changes for a very long time, say for two years (100
weeks). This is what I saw a couple of years ago at a "nature store":
they were selling sealed containers of about 1 gallon that contained
nothing except 2-3 tiny shrimps that lived off the algae growing in
the container and they were claimed to live for about two-three
years...
Theoretically the formula should hold for a big tank as well, but
there things are more complicated, because there are skimmers, algae
scrubbers, and other means to clean the water that make a significant
difference. Nanos are much simpler (we assume a nano without algae
scrubbing and skimmer).
Regards,
Mihai
I'm planning on a nano and I read most of the posts on the nano forum
and it seems that for nanos stocking is one of the most FAQs. And I
was thinking if we can come up with an approximative formula to
clarify stocking in a nano...
Something along these lines:
You can keep a nano in good health as long as you do 20% water
changes (with freshly prepared water) every week and your bioload does
not exceed your tank capacity.
Now to define bioload: for every inhabitant assign a tank capacity (in
gallons) that the respective inhabitant is messing up. I'm proposing
a few numbers here, just to give you an idea of how this works:
False Percula : 5
Clown Goby : 3
Firefish : 3
Zoanthid : 0.001/polyp
Mushroom : 0.005
Sun Coral : 0.2/polyp
Montipora Digitata: 0.001/cm
Mantis shrimp : 1
Turbo Snail : 0.1
Astrea Snail : 0.03
RedLegged crab : 0.05
BTA : 0.7
Clam : 0.5
If you're at half the bioload that your tank can sustain you probably
can go with 10% weekly water changes. If you're at double, you
probably have to go 20% water changes twice a week.
Notice that I'm not talking here about how much volume a fish needs
to feel well, but rather how much water it messes up. Hence a yellow
tang will probably be a 20 although it should not be housed in any
tank smaller than a 50 or 70.
I'm very new at the hobby and have 0 experience with the nanos, so I
can't make this list, but if one of you guys would put in the time and
effort to make such a list it would help a lot of people with stocking
questions.
I realize that the dynamics in a nano tank cannot be exactly captured
by a dry mathematical equation, however, I'm suggesting this as a way
to figure out an approximate ballpark, useful especially for
beginners. Of course, you'll get feedback from the tank itself that
will help you adjust your "calculation": if the algae get out of
control, your corals don't thrive, or (gasp) your pets die, your tank
is out of capacity although you may be "mathematically" OK.
If any of you guys with experience wants to take on such an endeavor,
I think that we should make this list as public as possible, perhaps
even publish it in a hobby's magazine (FAMA?).
In this case, we'll probably need some sort of validation for the
list. I suggest to look message boards on RDO, RC and nanoforums and
see good tanks and tanks with problems, compute the bioload capacity
for both and, hopefully, the tanks without problems have a bioload
smaller than the proposed limit and the other way around...
Any thoughts? Anybody's game for this? I'm willing to help with
anything I can (including suggestions and a validation of the list).
There is one more interesting data point: if one has a very low
bioload (say 1% of the nominal bioload), it should be able to go
without water changes for a very long time, say for two years (100
weeks). This is what I saw a couple of years ago at a "nature store":
they were selling sealed containers of about 1 gallon that contained
nothing except 2-3 tiny shrimps that lived off the algae growing in
the container and they were claimed to live for about two-three
years...
Theoretically the formula should hold for a big tank as well, but
there things are more complicated, because there are skimmers, algae
scrubbers, and other means to clean the water that make a significant
difference. Nanos are much simpler (we assume a nano without algae
scrubbing and skimmer).
Regards,
Mihai