Curt, thank you for the info! It makes perfect sense.
Thanks for the welcome. I'm from Houma, LA which is located in the southeast portion of Louisiana. I've dreamed of having a saltwater aquarium since I was a child but my father was opposed to that idea. However, he always had a 55 gallon freshwater aquarium up and running.
Well my dream came true a few months ago. My wife bought me a 90 gallon aquarium from a LFS while I was out of town and surprised me when I returned home for our wedding anniversary in Sept. 2006.
At this point, I'm trying to clean things up along the back of my tank. It's starting to getting cluttered with equipment.
I have the following running on the tank:
1. an unknown venturi protein skimmer (says Octupus HOT on the sales receipt but resembles a Bak-Pak 2R+) with a GX-1000 submersible pump (which is big & gaudy).
2. Marineland Emperor 400 Bio-wheel Powerfilter (too small for aquarium, not sure why LFS sold to wife).
3. Eheim Wet/Dry Filter System Model 2229 (I added about 3 weeks ago).
4. 250 watt Visi-Therm Stealth submersible heater (I added).
5. 2- Maxi-Jet 900 powerheads hanging in the back corners (I added).
6. 80 lbs of live rock (I added 20 lbs) and 40 lbs of deco rock.
7. 2 inches of live sand bed, 75 lbs.
8. Corallife Power Compact lighting, 2-65 watts Actinics 450 nm & 2-65 watts 10000K.
9. Niveaumat Top Off Water Replacer (I added).
10. 10-hermit crabs & 5-Turbo snails.
My protein skimmer seems to do an excellent job; however, it does retrieve water several inches below the water's surface. I have contemplated buying an AquaC Remora Filter Boxes to get my skimmer to filter more of the surface water and to somewhat hide the gaudy pump.
My wife initially began my tank with 2-blue devil damselfish and a 4-striped damsel. After a month and half, I added 2-clownfish. One of the blue damselfish was aggressive so he was removed and returned to the LFS since he had already removed half of the 4-striped damsel's tail and was beginning to pick on my beautiful clownfish. A few weeks later, the aquarium was doing wonderful so I decided to push my luck. I regrettably purchased a large Powder Blue Tang and Yellow Tang at my LFS. That Powder Blue Tang was beautiful. He did fine for about 2 weeks then he developed ICH and eventually died after a week. After researching, I'm a little upset that my LFS sold him to me (although I know its my fault). Shortly after his death, the ICH parasites must have jumped ship and attacked my clownfish. They perished a few days later. So far, my Yellow Tang has hung in there with the assistance of a cleaner shrimp. I also had a cleaner wrasse in the tank but he died after a few days due to the 2nd blue devil damsel messing up one of his fins. And he was doing an excellent job cleaning my Yellow Tang. I'm going to try again to catch the 2nd blue damsel and return him to the LFS. Then I'll add another cleaner wrasse.
My game plan is to wait a few weeks for this ICH to disappear, then I'll get a another pair of clownfish. I would love to add another Powder Blue Tang in a year or so but I would hate to kill another beautiful specimen. I guess I'll see how well my setup and my tank managing skills are progressing when the itch comes. After about 6-9 months, I would like to get into anemones and corals. But again, that's going to depend on my setup and tank managing skills.
Does anyone have any idea if the Eheim Wet/Dry 2229 filter is going to be a nitrate problem for me in the future? I have not had any problems thus far but it is still early in my system. I have yet to test positive for any ammonia, nitrites, or nitrates.
Thanks for the help!
I've learned a lot in the past 2 months, and sometimes it's been overwhelming. At times, I've tried to absorb too much. In these 2 months, I've basically read The Conscientious Marine Aquarist by Fenner, The New marine Aquarium by Paletta, Aquarium Keeping & Rescue by DelFavero, The book of the Marine Aquarium by Dakin, Aquarium Corals by Borneman, and Invertebrates: A Quick Reference Guide and Corals: A Quick Reference Guide by Julian Sprung / Oceanographic Series.