Well, what started out as only getting some hermit crabs and cleaner shrimp thing turned into a coral saving operation when...
I forgot to turn the power heads on in my nps tank after target feeding. I came back about 2 days later and found a lot of dead livestock. So I rush to save things like a mad woman. Silly mistake, which happens sometimes. Shame as I really wanted my nps pico to be longterm.
Fortunately, corals came out of the fiasco in better shape than I anticipated. I didn't lose any for now, which is excellent. They are now recovering here. Guys, please don't do this. This tank isn't ready for corals, IMO, and I didn't want to put these in there, but I was stuck with this situation and now I have to do extra work to compensate for my blunder with the nps tank. Thank goodness for extra systems kept at the same parameters.
So they are now here...
And here are the cleaner shrimp.
I also got 4 Electric blue hermits, which was the original plan.
Finally, some hardware stuff, because I didn't want to leap into Livestock so quickly. Meh!
I received my in tank refugium from Drs Foster & Smith yesterday and set it up today. It's awesome...
Out of the package. Yep, a Barber of Seville score. I do tank stuff, then I practice for a show on the 18th.
Top view... Easy, easy, easy to set up!
And the refugium in the tank... I also added another Aqueon 500, I like top agitation, so coral choice will bear this in mind. Organisms seem to be handling the flow very well. I'm sure fish will be fine. It's not that wild in there. They are well-placed.
LFS lost one of the planned jawfish, so second pair is on order for me. Those are the first fish. Again, I love them. They are like cute little ballerina aliens and now that I removed the Aquaclear filter I had for backup, I can put the cover that allows me to keep jumping ballerina alien fishies.
They'll be going into quarantine first (also with secure cover), so that'll give this system some time to recover before I go adding fish. I'll have to secure the sun corals, or find a little section where they can be together. Right now, the target feeding is a bit spread out, which is silly to me.
Yes, these corals are in direct light. NO, this is not wrong and no, I'm not killing my corals. They are non-photosynthetic, but tubastraea in the wild are also found in direct sun as are balanos and dendros. They are just not dependent on the sun for food.
Thanks for looking.
L