Psycho. Thank you. I have never replaced the dolomite gravel. It actually has been in there for about 40 years. The tank was a brackish tank in the late sixtees because there was no salt then. In late 1971 I added more salt making it a full salt tank. If I look under the tank I can see a very little detritus, I can still see through it to the UG filter plates. When I cleaned it for the first time in 27 years I lifted the plates because I was curious as to what was under it. It wasen't too bad. Don't get me wrong, it was dirty but a lot of the "stuff" under there was small sand particles that migrated down and I also added mud from the Long Island Sound as an experiment a few times. I use a lot of Sound water too)
As to the moorish Idol I have had him about 4 years. I have had quite a few of them over the years and I think I finally have it almost down to a science. I even went to Bora Bora to dive with them and try to learn their secret. It seems that they always live in mated pairs and the male leads the female to food which is almost always this sticky lime green sponge that I could not identify. I myself collect encrusting sponge on floating docks in the Sound to feed him. (my boat is on the Sound)
The other secret is that you need to feed them at least three times a day, four is better and five is best. I do this by feeding him in a dish.
I have a small dish in there with a tube running to the surface. At the top is a funnel and above that is an automatic
feeder. The feeder puts pellest in the funnel twice a day. The Idol checks out the dish on every loop around the tank. For the third and sometimes fourth feeding I give either sponge (which I have frozen) clam, mussel, oyster, bananas, avacado, small fish, plankton or one of the commercially prepared frozen reef fish foods like Angel something or other. He also gets live black worms daily.
So far he has lived through two eye operations and two weeks ago when it was 7 degrees my power and heat went off for a day and a half when no one was home. My fish did not look good and three of them came down with a severe case of ich. They look fine now after no treatment.
That was the first ich I have seen in about 25 years even though I don't quarantine (but you should).
I don't want anyone to think my Moorish Idol looks like he just came out of the sea. His dorsal streamer is gone and has been for two years and after the ich last week some of his tail is missing. I am nursing him back to his beautiful self now. The problem is my reef is only 100 gallons and the Idol is almost 7". He eats way too much to be in such a small tank and although I could get him to be as beautiful as he was, my water is suffering from all the food. There are about ten other fish in there but they are small mostly gobies, a mandarin and a copper band butterfly.
Have a great day.
Thank you for letting me visit.
Paul
The dish is all covered in coraline algae now