- Location
- Virginia
I had a recent disaster in my school tank (Floris Reef Tank) and also have been doing things I probably should not in my daughter's tank. In the school tank, I lost all of my fish to a yet unknown culprit. The water parameters are fine, but the fish have all disappeared. In my daughter's tank, I rushed things and put fish in within a day of adding rock (the tank seems to be stable, but I haven't been able to do a lot of water testing on it and the one set I did do ended up giving me puzzling results). In looking through the build off forum, I see people doing things that are incredible design wise, but I also see people doing things the way I have, quickly. I know that I used to follow the old rule of thumb that when adding a fish, wait a week or so before adding another one. Is what we are doing with corals a good idea? I'm not sure. I know that in a 125 I was able to add a lot of corals at the same time because let's face it, a 1 inch frag in a 125 gallon plus system with a few hundred pounds of live rock is not going to crash a system, especially with lots of waste eating creatures in it like clams, zoos, xenia, etc. However, what's the impact in a 30 gallon or smaller tank? This is something I definitely can't answer because of my newness with nano reefs. Is the amount of rock that come with some inverts enough to offset any added bioload? Are we trying to "outcompete" one another in order to win a prize (it's only a $50 gift certificate which in the long run is not a whole lot to any reefer) instead of reef responsibly? I know that I'm trying to be as responsible as possible in my classroom tank, but a lot of that has to do with the fact that I can't afford a lot for it. In my daughter's tank, I'm not as responsible and am succumbing to the pressure of making it look good and be interesting for her. In the end, am I dooming my tank to failure? Whatever happened to the adage that you shouldn't add sps or acropora to a tank until it has been set up for at least a year, giving time for the sand bed to mature and the rock to fully develop into what it's going to? Is that simply outdated (I haven't had a reef for over two years up until now) or is it still the standard? Just my thoughts, I'd be curious to hear yours.
Dave
Dave