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What kind of tangs are fit for a 75 gallon tank
I was hoping to get an already made mesh top to have a flasher wrasse in my tank, but it turned out the mesh top I was waiting for doesn't fit my top tank. My husband is not a handyman, neither am I, so I have to change to another plan. I would like to get a tang instead of a wrasse. The problem is I only have a 75 gallon tank and I am unable to upgrade to any tank that is bigger than what I have, because I live in a very small apartment. I really don't want to put him/her on trade/sell later with a reason like it is getting too big for my tank. I need someone who is currently having a tang that is living happily in a small tank (like mine) for a long time. Please kindly sharing your experience what kind of a tang you have and how long you have had it. No yellow tang for me.
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Too bad, yellows are one of my favorites. A kole might work, or a scopas. You don't have a lot of selection if you can't upgrade or don't want to trade later. That's about all I'd put in. you could look for people selling tangs from their system that they've had a long time and appear to have stopped growing. I've seen a few that just seem to stay small. Even then though, the instinct of most tangs is to swim fast and far...
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any bristletooth tangs well be okay. mimic half black i have heard also.
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Putting a screen on your tank is easy, go to rona and get a window screen kit and then go to canadian tire and get a roll of plastic chicken wire. The instructions on how to make it are written on the screen kit, just use the plastic wire instead of the screen material that comes with the kit (chicken wire lets better light into your tank)
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theory is that fish will grow according to the size of the tank. this may not be true, but they may grow a lot slower after they reach the ideal size for the particular tank.
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check this out, It give you the best recommendations based on your size of tank.
http://www.liveaquaria.com/product/a...num=1&count=24 |
The answer quite honestly is none.
The reason is tangs are swimmers and require the larger longer six foot tanks that provide them with the room to do what they do best, swim. You can observe them constantly swimming to and fro in the larger tanks. It is never a good idea t buy a tang with the idea that you will upgrade to meet its needs later. Unforeseen things like losing a job, a divorce or separation and a change of housing can doom your tang in a tiny tank despite your best intentions. Esquire, live aquaria is an online fish seller. Their opinion on size is coloured by the fact that they are in the fish selling business and naturally want to sell as many as they can. Apex, that may be theory but the rule is a stunted fish is a stressed fish. We as reefers have an obligation to provide the optimum conditions for all critters we remove from the sea. Thanks for asking, before you buy. |
+1 on none
A stressed tang will also be a sick tang. I have a 6 foot tank and personally won't keep tangs. I love them but stress helps ich IMO which tangs are prone to. Leading to a tank full of dead fish and a stressed hobbiest |
Well Im going to jump in here I have a 8 footer and having a sailfin and a orange shoulder tang IMO my tank is too small. I have a kole and 3 yellows, my kole is 4-5 " tops and he/she is 10 years old. however hasnt greown where I have seen koles in the wild and in huge tanks and I was shocked on how long and big they were. Casey a brittletooth, tommi ,Kole, Chevron are all good ones. the yellows i have long the 8 footer too and they use it. My OST loves the longer tank and im looking at going to gift her to the aquarium in Winnipeg where she can have fun.
P.S hows the skimmer doing. if you need help making the screen let me know I can call you and discuss a no brainer on how to make it. |
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the Tang police have it wrong. |
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Ideally, there is no such thing as a tang suitable for a 75g tank. However, people are determined, so there are a few that have been suggested that would do ok. I've had some of these in a 75g, and they did not appear to require therapy. |
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I'm not sure why some people single out Tangs for their aquarium suitability. When it comes down to it no fish is really suitable for an aquarium. I doubt they can tell the difference between a 50 and a 500 gallon when they're use to an ocean.
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I've had various tangs in a 75g, and honestly, they were no more stressed in there than in my current 180. |
The 6 foot argument is pretty weak if you give this much thought. All shades of the same colour and all of our tanks are too small. naesco your old bull nose 6 footer was one of the smallest 6 footers you can buy. Personally I'd aim for a tank with the length and turn around width of a standard 180 as a feel good minimum for anything besides your kole and similar tangs. In the end it's us feeling a bit better about keeping things we really shouldn't. My tank is over stocked as far as tangs go too with just two! I find it a bit amusing that the tang police front man on canreef had as many tangs as he did in a tank that was what... 135 gallons? My kole in my 97 was likely more comfy than the acanthurus species in your old tank.
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Yellow tang was one of my favorites for over 10 years too, but this time I want to get something different. Anyway, one of my canreef friends offered to help me to make a mesh top for my tank :mrgreen: so I am going back to my original plan to get a flasher wrasse. No more tangs for me at this time.
Thanks for all your input and chiming in to help me. You guys/gals are wonderful whenever I need your help. |
Hamy you should get a Mcorskers, clown, pair of leopards i love wrasses once i down grade i will have more wrasses.
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Yes, that is the McCorsker wrass I am going to get, it is so beautiful but also a good jumper too.
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This thread is bound to lead to a public flogging for even posting it.
If it does not, something is wrong as I have been chastised more than once. I have a yellow in my 70 and it's happy happy. Keep the tang smaller, and once it's size is edging on outgrowing the tank , you can rehome it or maybe trade for a smaller. Most people are ok advising kole tangs, but most think none. Be smart on the specimen you choose. I am sure, without reading all the posts, you will find a variety that you can keep, if anything, for a couple years. Good luck and let us know what you decide. |
we put ppl in 4x 8 cells lol no one batts an eye. these rules ideas and thoughts are great it does help ppl think before they act but it depends on the caregiver as well first off your not going to try and put a shark in a small tank just wont happen. nor should anyone put a regal in a 40g tank you know its going to outgrow it... im guilty of putting my regal in my 90. although i did plan to upgrade. and since my wife loves this fish it was a great incentive:)
as i say i do appreciate the concern for these fish. if you feel the space is inadequate then it most likely is. and just planning to upgrade isnt an excuse unless you have the means to do so. i made a mistake and put a yellow in my 50 to help with algea and he did a great job. the plan was to move him to the 180 when built but. the space was just to small even though he was a juv and regretfully he didnt make it. its not like we can take our fish fr a walk to stretch thier fins lol. all that said a 75 is ok maybe for awhile but id aim for 120 ish for a yellow personally.follow your own concience just how i feel and i never claim to be right forever learning...usualy from mistakes |
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I am more concerned about the fishes health and happiness if they are cramped into a small space like my tank in the long term. I have decided to go back to my original plan to get a wrasse, I can see my tank is not suited for any of the tangs because they are fast and far (as aquattro said)... and grow too big. I am attached to my fish very much, I know I can't sell him/her later on. |
I have a 314 gallon 7 foot tank with the following fish:
Powder Brown Yellow Tang Blue Hippo Tang Blue Throat Trigger Black Clowns False Perc Clowns Domino Damsels 3 stripe Damsel Azure Damsels Sand Sifting Goby Coral Beauty Lamarck Angel Foxface I used to have a Lavender Tang and Niger Trigger. The only tangs that use up the entire swimming area in my tank are the Powder Brown and Lavender Tang. The Black clowns do laps of the entire tank. The Hippo Tang really stays put in one spot. The others drift here and there but don't really use a lot of swimming area. The Foxface and Trigger do a lot of vertical laps from the sandbed to the surface. If I still had my smaller 4 foot tank my yellow tang and hippo would have been fine in it. |
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Those of us who keep tangs in smaller tanks and upgraded to larger tanks saw obvious differences in tang activity. They spend the day zooming back and forth instead of kinda just hanging around. |
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Never mind. No point in actually commenting as it only comes back negative. |
Thanks everyone :mrgreen:
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Gee, this reminds me of the Tang Police knocking on my door when I posted in the 2012 FTS thread. Haha!
I know of someone else that has a Blonde Naso in a BC29. :wink: Quote:
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Holy ... what a stupid !
P.S. : Like me !!! |
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the bio load would give me a head ache lol |
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Maybe it was a Shang? Lol. |
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Peter,
You haven't updated your SIG with your recent addition of the Achilles yet. :wink: Also, I thought you would've seen the Blonde Naso in the BioCube when you picked up your 210? :twised: |
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