Recent content by Reefmonkey

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  1. R

    Gone Native

    I started my pond back in 2006. I wanted something natural-looking, not traffic cones with fins, so instead of goldfish or koi, I intially went with central and south american cichlids. I had a surprising amount of success for a while - with submersible heaters and bubble wrap, I was able to...
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    Water Changes: A PITA.

    Shouldn't be a problem. If you're doing your frequent, partial water changes, you're only replacing about 20%, max. Any chlorine in the water you're adding will be diluted to below dangerous levels as soon as it enters the tank, and then adding a dechlrinator will neutralize it.
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    Water Changes: A PITA.

    Get a python. No, not the snake. It's a siphon that attaches to your sink, and uses water flow to create the vacuum to start the siphon - so no getting fish water in your mouth ever again. Plus, the siphoned-off water goes directly in the sink, so no more hauling buckets. When you have siphoned...
  4. R

    Quarantining freshwater crustaceans?

    That'll work for ectoparasites that are big enough to be visible to the naked eye, but nothing else.
  5. R

    Quarantining freshwater crustaceans?

    this is a hypothetical question, I am not planning to get anything anytime soon. I would agree with you on the separate tank for the voracious crayfish, but what about gabon river shrimp (not voracious), or for that matter all the snails that people like to put into their tanks? Certainly not...
  6. R

    Quarantining freshwater crustaceans?

    That's a good idea, but no, I don't keep a QT up and running. When I get a new acquisition, I siphon off water from my established tank into a bare 10 gallon that is usually in storage. I might think about putting in a couple of feeder guppies that I buy when I would buy the invert, but of...
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    Quarantining freshwater crustaceans?

    Any suggestions, then, on how to better ensure that the inverts we introduce into our tanks are not going to have hitchhikers? There is a real possibility that an infection which is asymptomatic in an invert could be zoonotic, and devastating to a fish. Simply quarantining the crayfish to see if...
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    Quarantining freshwater crustaceans?

    When I quarantie fish before putting them into my main tank, I treat them prophylacticly with QuICKCure. I'd like to use a similar prophylactic treatment on crustaceans like river shrimp, crayfish, etc, but am not sure what treatments are safe on them. Any suggestions?
  9. R

    Freshwater Liverock

    As my tank is African cichlids, mbunas, etc., rockwork as cover for the fish is necessary, anyway. The possibility of the algae on the rocks contributing to better water qualitiy is just an added plus. Besides, the algae is a nice food source for the fish. But it is covered with...
  10. R

    What are glow fish

    They are zebra danios that have been genetically modified by having a gene spliced into their DNA. The gene is from a ctenophore, also called a comb jelly (though not a true jelly), which are capable of bioluminescence. Though I don't want any for my tanks, I don't really see anything wrong...
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    Moving House

    I have a 55 gallon tank with 6 large Africans that I moved last summer without cycling the tank before putting the fish in. On the same day, I took the fish out, broke the tank down, moved it, set it back up, and put the fish in. Though I would have liked to have done things differently (holding...
  12. R

    Freshwater Liverock

    I'm going to go register the trademark.
  13. R

    Freshwater Liverock

    We all understand the impracticality of keeping live plants in our African Cichlid tanks, and accept that keeping our nitrogenous waste levels down in solely dependent on filtration, microbiological activity, and water changes. Or is it? I have Texas holey rock limestone throughout my setup...
  14. R

    Suggest a third species for a Tanganyika tank

    Whoa, I just reread and realized how many Frontosias you will be having. The odds would be against any smaller fish. Wouldn't you rather stock it with a variety of fish, including maybe one frontosia?
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    Suggest a third species for a Tanganyika tank

    Neolamprologus pulcher - daffodil. I have one in a 55 with a big, lumbering Frontosia, who doesn't bother him or the other smaller fish like my L. calvus, at all.
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