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lilko

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My tank has been sitting for some time now. Water parameters look great so I would like to start to add some corals. Right now I have just 3 damsels, that will be going back to the store soon, and some snails. What kind of corals I could keep in my tank? See my signature for tank info.

Your advice will be highly appreciated.
Robert
 
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Anonymous

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I'd say a purple blade gorgonia or maybe some mushrooms would be ok. I'm not so sure you need more rock. I found that the corals that I added to my tank came attached to some pretty big pieces of LR. And how big your pieces of LR are is more important than how much they weigh if you consider the importance of water circulation.

just my opinion, I'm still a rookie
po
 
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Anonymous

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lilko":35yk9cka said:
My tank has been sitting for some time now. Water parameters look great so I would like to start to add some corals. Right now I have just 3 damsels, that will be going back to the store soon, and some snails. What kind of corals I could keep in my tank? See my signature for tank info.

Your advice will be highly appreciated.
Robert

i agree w/po- your rock amount may be just fine-better to go by visual volume than poundage, anyway, imho-(about 30% of the volume of the tank is absolutely fine)more rock does not equal more bacteria,more waste equals more bacteria :wink:

an analogy-pretend it's thanksgiving, and you have a turkey that can feed 10 people.you have 10 people seated at the table.friends show up, so you add chairs-but they can't eat until you cook another turkey!
the waste in your tank is the turkey, the bacteria are your guests, and the rocks are the chairs-your rock has lots of vacant chairs avaiable,and the amount of bacteria will always equal only what the waste production of the tank can feed.
many people underestimate the potential ability of what a pound of rock can process,imho. -also,adding a rock is always abit counterproductive, too,since the area covered on the existing rock reduces the water circulation available to that side-reducing its filtering ability.the rock structure will function at its maximum when you have good circulation around as much of the surface area as possible.

your lighting is a bit low, with NO bulbs-a bubble should do ok-they're fairly tolerant of lower light levels, and should adapt, no prob. shrooms should do o.k., too.and also as po said-the non photosynthetic gorg's-though they like good current, and you may have to feed 'em, abit.

fwiw-if you have to stay w/NO bulbs-try to keep 'em 50/50's-that will help you get the max. actinic levels without having the tank look too blue.

keep us posted :)
hth
 

Nelliereefster

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With the lighting you have, you will be able to keep most mushrooms, some euphillia (frogs spawn/hammer corals towards the top) and maybe a few leathers (sarco-lobo-sinularia) Also, clove polyps, briarium and perhaps xenia near the top, and anthelia.

Things to avoid: Anenomes, Acros, plate corals, Favites, porites, turbinaria (any of the high-intensity SPS's)

What are you using for circulation inside the tank, and, have you noticed coralline growth anywhere?

Vitz is right on with the turkey guest and chair analogy. Right now your tank is in dynamic equilibrium. The bio-load represents a certain quantity of waste, which in turn requires a certain bacteria "mass" to process it.

As you increase bio-load, you imbalance one side of the teeter-totter. More (added) bio load = more waste => build up of intermediary nitrogenous compounds (ammonia, nitrite, nitrate) which is a food source for the bacteria colonies, who in turn multiply to consume the bounty. And the system once again returns to dynamic equilibrium...

So every time you add something to the tank, it momentarily throws things out of equilibrium. Small changes are quickly dealt with naturally, big additions aren't.
 

lilko

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I have no plan to add more rock at this time, based on my reasearch so far. I was more concern about what kind of corals I can keep with PC and NO lights I presently have. Lights are 2 x 96W PC SmartBulbs(50/50), 1 x 40W NO ActinicBlue and 3 x 40W NO 10000. Current is provided by 4 power heads 1 x Maxijet 1000, 1 x ZooMed PowerSweep 226, 1 x Hagen 201, 1 x Hagen 301 and sump return powered by Mag 5. My tank is only 18" tall so with 4"-6" DSB the distance from light to substrate is between 16" - 18".

Thnaks a lot Robert.
 
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Anonymous

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i think that most of the 'softies'-leathers, star polyps, zooanthids, should also be fine,as well as many lps's-fungia,blastomussa, open brains, frogspawn, hammer, etc.
(sorry, didn't notice the pc's in your sig. from your first post :oops: )
 

lilko

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Nelliereefster":1aqtuxj9 said:
What are you using for circulation inside the tank, and, have you noticed coralline growth anywhere.

Here is a picture how my all rock looks like.

rock1.jpg


RB
 

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