I have been thinking that the next thing im going to get for my tank is shrimp. I was orginally thinking about getting 2 cleaner shrimp. But know I was wondering if I could get 2 cleaner shrimp and 1 peppermint shrimp? Are these okay together?
I think you could do with a herbivoreous fish eg. an algae blenny, a dwarf angel or a tang (if tank is big enough), to help you rid of that macroalgae. What are your current params? You may have high PO4 that is feeding it?
Also an emerald crab isn't a bad idea, my is always eating away at some form of algae in my tank so believe it is a good asset as it tends to leave everything else in the tank alone! some algae eating hermits may also help a bit along with physically trying to rip out as much as you can!
oh BTW you dont NEED any shrimps, they can be a pain in the backside if nothing else as always nick food off the fish and corals but do look good in the tank i must admit By the way scarlet shrimps are cleaner shrimps??? did you mean fire shrimp instead?
sorry scott but IMO thats a bit mean on the fish to get it, acclimatise it, then just when its settled catch it and take it back to the LFS.thats alot of stress to put on a fish.
you'd be better off getting an algae blennie that can live quite happily in the tank for the rest of its life.
OMG you have a pair of Helfrichs, please tell us more, where did you get them, how much, more photos...........
Seffie x
i think my firefish has ich! what do i do?
i think my firefish has ich! what do i do?
Is she still feeding auryt? and what makes you believe she has got ich in the first place?
Cleaner shrimp may posibbly help but I have never really known anyone through personal experience who got rid of ich through a cleaner shrimp alone!
Personally I have had ich my my tank twice now and I have found that keeping a close eye on all my livestock and feeding quality food helps them overcome it IMO. the last time all my fish in the tank caught it but i continued to fee dand it all passed over and i didnt lose anything (touches wood).
other people may give you other opinions which may also work but its your decision what you decide to do as it is a lovely fish and it would be a big shame if anything happend to it. you could always take the fish out of the tank and treat it in a seperate tank with some form of copper based ich treatment! but if you decide to do this then you will have to treat the clowns as well as any other fish you may have in the tank and leave the tank fish free for a few weeks so any ich in the water column will starve and die without a host fish to attach themselves on to...
Good luck