I’ve had a tank running for about a year now and I’ve noticed that one of my biggest cleaning problems is the algae buildup on the glass below the gravel line. I’ve had some success dragging a scraper through the gravel to stir up the gravel and release the gas pockets that are forming, but I’ve had a real problem keeping the glass (acrylic to be specific) near the gravel line clean. On a couple occasions I’ve gotten too close to the gravel with my magnetic scraper and gotten a little piece stuck in the scraper, only realizing after I’ve scratched a nice big Z across the glass.
My question is if it would be a smart idea to remove the gravel from my tank? Would it make tank cleaning less work, and are there any downsides to not having gravel in a tank? If it turns out I need gravel, would it help to have less (and how much is enough)?
Also, I’ve got a nice fat diamond goby that does great eating frozen and flake food, so I’m not worried about him starving, but I didn’t know if he needed to have something to sift in order to stay happy/healthy.
Thanks for any thoughts or advice on the subject.
-Sculpin
My question is if it would be a smart idea to remove the gravel from my tank? Would it make tank cleaning less work, and are there any downsides to not having gravel in a tank? If it turns out I need gravel, would it help to have less (and how much is enough)?
Also, I’ve got a nice fat diamond goby that does great eating frozen and flake food, so I’m not worried about him starving, but I didn’t know if he needed to have something to sift in order to stay happy/healthy.
Thanks for any thoughts or advice on the subject.
-Sculpin