Someone who has actually been to a reef, like Anthony, might best be able to answer my question.
As reef tank enthusiasts, there is a tendency to want to recreate the colorful and varied panoramas we see in pictures of real reefs. As a result, we try to cram a variety of corals into a tank that would never be found together in the wild in such close proximity.
Let's say I want to do a 75 gallon reef tank which is 48 x 18 x 20 if IIRC. What would a wild reef have in this same area?
2 or 3 coral species? A handful of fish/inverts? Then lots of smaller flora and fauna?
Thinking my next tank might be a species tank.
Mark
As reef tank enthusiasts, there is a tendency to want to recreate the colorful and varied panoramas we see in pictures of real reefs. As a result, we try to cram a variety of corals into a tank that would never be found together in the wild in such close proximity.
Let's say I want to do a 75 gallon reef tank which is 48 x 18 x 20 if IIRC. What would a wild reef have in this same area?
2 or 3 coral species? A handful of fish/inverts? Then lots of smaller flora and fauna?
Thinking my next tank might be a species tank.
Mark