Retirement and forum shutdown (17 Jan 2022)
Hi,
John Howell who has managed the forum for years is getting on and wishes to retire from the role of managing it.
Over the years, he has managed the forum through good days and bad days and he has always been fair.
He has managed to bring his passion for fish keeping to the forum and keep it going for so long.
I wish to thank John for his hard work in keeping the forum going.
With John wishing to "retire" from the role of managing the forum and the forum receiving very little traffic, I think we must agree that forum has come to a natural conclusion and it's time to put it to rest.
I am proposing that the forum be made read-only from March 2022 onwards and that no new users or content be created. The website is still registered for several more years, so the content will still be accessible but no new topics or replies will be allowed.
If there is interest from the ITFS or other fish keeping clubs, we may redirect traffic to them or to a Facebook group but will not actively manage it.
I'd like to thank everyone over the years who helped with forum, posted a reply, started a new topic, ask a question and helped a newbie in fish keeping. And thank you to the sponsors who helped us along the away. Hopefully it made the hobby stronger.
I'd especially like to thank John Howell and Valerie Rousseau for all of their contributions, without them the forum would have never been has successful.
Thank you
Darragh Sherwin
My attempt at a native tank
- MarinusAddictus (Marius Schudel)
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Very nice! Always like pictures from your tank.
Those eggs are from the netted dog whelk which usually lives in the sand and comes out (very cool looking!) when foods is close or at night. Have loads of them too thats how I know

Good Luck
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- MarinusAddictus (Marius Schudel)
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- Joukeder (Jouke)
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We have some new species and an old problem. The green algae is plaguing us again. Comes and goes but my impression is that its worse in winter. The only serious argue eaters are the sea urchins. They do the quantity. Snails eat too but you would need 200 of them do me a dent. Will be getting some black urchins soon to grow the force.
We have two pinks urchins and they are beautiful. However, the rock cook wrasses eat their suckers and their spines. The black ea urchins are not prone to such attacks. One pink one died with a week in the tank.
Less light in the winter in the tack and lower temperatures (by 2-3 degrees)> Does not make sense why algae are blooming.
Feeding twice a day with food eaten all within two or three minutes. Anybody offer ideas?
All the anemones fare very well. Growing and multiplying.
Will post some pics in separate post.
Best,
Jouke
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- Joukeder (Jouke)
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- Joukeder (Jouke)
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Which species is this?
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- Joukeder (Jouke)
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- ceech (Desmond Gaynor)
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- MarinusAddictus (Marius Schudel)
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Great to see such a lovely update! Nice pictures and videos!
The crab is probably a Inachus phalangium, Leach's spider crab. They live around anemones, normally snakelocks and go for the scrabs and discards.
May I ask what temperature you are running at?
I went down to 11degrees over the winter and real lighting times and all my green algea (and I had plenty) nearly completely dissappeared. You also probably (as every long running tank) have a bit of phosphates building up. Seaweeds can take this up but the microalgea is faster in doing so and therefore thrive very well. Its a tricky one but there is some media that you can run in a reactor or external filter that are supposed to remove phosphates.
Other options maybe try and get some wireweed Sargassum muticum grows really fast and will take up excess nutrients and is very easily found. Doesnt need to be attached to a rock to grow. Good thing too is that the snails usually dont eat it.
Also good would be (if you dont have other macro seaweeds) just add 200 periwinkle or other algea eating Snails like you said. No harm, just need to regularly push them back down into the water as they are crazy for out of water suicide missions. They will also be natural food for hermits and anemones etc.
The SeaHare Aplysia punctata is enomously efficient at eating microalgea too. Look deadly and are proper eating machines. You can find them at the moment again in the pools. Looks just like a jelly blob in the net when you run it through the weeds. Only have a 1,5 years lifespan so they will not take over even if they might breed. And they dont go out of the water.
Also my favourite Seaslug the Elysia chlorotica is good at eating green algea but not as fast as they are smaller. Very cool animals read this if interested...
www.newscientist.com/article/dn16124-sol...es.html#.VOI39vmsVvA
Really cool to see the Butterfish, I have one too now. How long do you have it in?
Keep the pictures and updates coming its great to see it!
All the best
Marius
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- Joukeder (Jouke)
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I am always amazed by your knowledge of species and environment. How come you're so learned? Pure hobby or are you a biologist?
I run my tank from 15 degrC in the morning when I switch off cooling to about 18C at midnight when cooling kicks in. This is mainly to avoid the cooling noise during the day and evening. Given your advice I lowered the target from 15 to 12C just now. Will get a good quantity of periwinkles as soon as weather permits. Indeed, I call them Lemming snails for their suicidal tendencies. They also like to sit on my low water alarm float swtich, causing false alarms in the process.
As to phosphates, I will measure them tonight. However we change 70% of the water every four weeks. So the buildup may not be that great. Will post phosphate value asap.
How do these Sargassum muticum seaweeds survive if they are not attached to rocks? Much current in the tank because of the two hydors.
Will look out for some sea hares they look fantastic. How many do you have in your tank? And what colours?
Have five butterfish in the tank. Brown and grey ones. Very sociable untill food time. Then you see their energy. Especially with raw mussles. They fling them around and around tearing out pieces. The one longest in the tank has been in for nine months.
Have a larger pipe fish since a week. Is very lively after a difficult day or two. Have not seen him eating yet. Any sugestions on what they eat/like?
Best,
Jouke
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- Joukeder (Jouke)
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Filters clog up very quickly and the pre-filters need cleaning every second day because of the floating algea. This deminishes filter efficiency. Need to getrid of this pest ASAP.
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- MarinusAddictus (Marius Schudel)
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Haha thanks for your compliment but I am not a biologist


Reducing the temp is definitely going to help, as it did me. I tried many things and its only since I have the chiller I seem to have progress. 18 is summer temperature and it would be "normal" (as in nature) for microalgea and epyphites to completely take over. Have you the lighting to the current daylight? Maybe for a trial reduce it a few hours less to speed up the reduction of micros especially if you dont have other macros (that would need the light).
Okay thats some big water changes there. Sounds like a lot of work

Now again I am not a specialist and all this is just my opinion but here is what happens in my system. Since introducing some live rock (from Shop) in a low flow area (very important) I have zero ammonia, nitrite and nitrate. Phosphate at 0.2. I have not done water any changes from june to november last year and still keeping these values. (was surprised!) But during that time I had lots of microalgea and epyphytes but it is also natural to some extend in summer. Now I have to say I did have only around 4-6 swimming fish and lots of detrivores like cushion stars, hermits, prawns, brittlestar, snails, etc. I do not have a filter running in the system. All I have is a big skimmer and some filter foam just sitting in the sump for harbouring bacteria.
Just some questions as I would love to help solve this problem. What kind of water do you use for topping up? Are you running a skimmer? What type filters/media/flowrates are you running? Whats your cleanup crew?
I just wedge the Sargassum between rocks. You could tie it to rocks with fishing line or use superglue (a friend does that, never tried myself). Best is if you try to scrape the seaweed off the rocks (with a creditcard type thing) so that the holdfast disc is still "intact" makes it easier. Or find one growing on a small enough rock so you could bring the whole thing. The base of this seaweed is fairly rigid which makes it easy to hold in place.
The seahares around here are kind of red/purplish. But I read they change colour to whatever they are eating after a while. So if yours start to feed on that green microalgea they could turn to green which would be amazing! I only have a small one now. Had too big ones last year. They are deadly to watch.
Snails can only help also removing uneating food etc. Lemming snails is very fitting

Really cool to see the butterfish thrive so well. I always thought they dont do well but nine months surely proofs the opposite. Mine is really shy and doesnt really come out in the open during daylight.
I have a great pipefish too, its the one with the blue stripes on the side? I would guess that they would live live mysis but they defninitely go for all the little critters like copepods and stuff but very difficult to add as food. maybe try frozen mysis and kind of spot feed with tweezers and see if he is interested.
Right I better get back to work now

Keep me updated would be great if we could solve this and maybe you will also need to make less water changes in the future if it gets more stable.
BTW how do you collect so much water?
All the best
Marius
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- Joukeder (Jouke)
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Jouke
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- Joukeder (Jouke)
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Also planning two or three water changes in quick succession to alleviate the highs.
I must say that we had zero ammonia and nitrite for a long time with this set-up so I know it's possible.
We have three large klusters of mussels in the tank and I suspect these contribute to the problem. In a filtered tank they do not have much to eat and can die off. Difficult to see under the algae... I plan to remove them.
My filter set-up is a JBL external e1501 filter 1500l/h max. Then an EHEIM Interal Filter biopower 240 of 750l/h max
JBL microspheres in all plus one compartment of BioPelletsXL in the biopower. These are supposed to reduce phosphates.....
No skimmers. Not physically possible in my tank. Also, Skimmers are not necessarily recommended with anemones.
I love my anemones.
We do have a fair amount of fish in the tank. 20 two spotted gobies. 9 Rock cooks, Three blennies Three cuckoo wrasse, 5 butterfish, one stickleback, two tiny pipefish and one large one. Three small squat lobsters. One star.
I do very little or no topup.Not usually required if we do monthly water changes as we do. In fact when the water is getting a tad low we do a water change before too long. Not much evaporation given the water temperature always being lower then the room.
Must now go on the Sargassum hunt and plant in tank. Will be nice addition as we have not had plants in this winter.
Clean up crew about 20 periwinkle and about 15 hermits at present. Will increase this asap and try and get a few hares if I can find them that is.
Fingers crossed!
Jouke
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- MarinusAddictus (Marius Schudel)
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Thats a good point with the mussels. I add phytoplankton every week and they still die off eventually as they dont find enough food. If I where you I would still leave them in and just increase the size of your cleanup crew. If some mussels die they can feed on them naturally as long as they have access. I would say definitely adding cushion stars would help too. They are not predators and mainly feed as scavangers and also feed on the algea film which is perfect for us aquarists!

A skimmer would definitely help but your mechanical filtration seems plenty so once the system settles again it should be okay. Interesting, why are skimmers not recommended with anemones?
Okay yes thats handy like that you dont have to do topup.
Plenty of fish in your tank so I think if you massively increase the detrivores (clean up crew) the system will probably settle again on its own. In a tank your size you could easily have 200 periwinkles and 50 cushion stars

Let me know how you get on and good luck finding some sea hares!
All the best
Marius
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- Joukeder (Jouke)
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I halved feeding from twice to once a day.
Amonia 0.05 Nitrite 0.1 Nitrate 5
Thanks Marinus for your advice.
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- Joukeder (Jouke)
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Here are some pics of the monster:
Here some circular eggs that were a by-catch. Anyone knows what they are? Fortunately they are not (yet) eaten by the gobies
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- CrustyCrab (Peter Biddulph)
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Will you be making fancy cucumber sandwiches ?
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- Fishowner (Gavin fishowner)
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Gavin
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- MarinusAddictus (Marius Schudel)
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Glad to hear your algea is going back!
Good luck and keep us posted
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- Joukeder (Jouke)
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We inadvertantly added three scorpions to the tank thinking they were juvenile blennies. Must take them out before they get too big.
I think that will mean a complete removal of all the 'furniture' from the tank as I see no other way to catch them. I think they are too shrewed to be tempted by traps. What do you think Crusty?
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- MarinusAddictus (Marius Schudel)
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- CrustyCrab (Peter Biddulph)
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The Lumpsucker/Seahen is a great fish, but a very big one. It's now in the National Aquarium in Galway.
Looking forward to more collecting and great company on the Beara next week.
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- Joukeder (Jouke)
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Thanks and have fun.
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