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#1
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![]() I got my first pod by trading sand with other reefers. A cup for a cup, or a rock for a rock from various reefers will go along way to diversify your sand bed.
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THE BARQUARIUM: 55 gallon cube - 50 lbs LR - ASM G3 skimmer - 30 Gallon sump - 22 Gallon refugium / frag tank - 4x 24 watt HO T5's - Mag 9.5 return - Pin Point PH monitor - 400 watt XM 20K MH in Lumenarc reflector - Dual stage GFO/NO3 media reactor - 6 stage RODI auto top up -Wavemaster Pro running 3 Koralia 2's. Fully stocked with fish, corals and usually some fine scotch http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=55041 |
#2
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![]() I have roughly 40lbs of live rock in my sump with Chaeto and the only inhabitant in there is a single ocellaris clown.
If seen pod piles mentioned before. Are they basically just a small pile of rubble in the display tank? Tony - I hear you about the six line. I loved him when I got him but he has become a realy jerk in the tank. It's funny, he jumped out around 2 months ago but I was there shortly after and got him back in the tank and brought him back to life. I should have left him on the carpet. He is even worse now though as I think he suffered some mental damage whne he was on the carpet. ...allthough politcally incorrect we call him Corky now ![]()
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- Greg 90G : Light - Tek 6xT5 | Skim - EuroReef RS135 | Flow - 2xVortech MP40W | Control - Reef Keeper 2 |
#3
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![]() I've never had a sixline go crazy on me *knock on wood*, and mine has lived peacefully with my mandarin for a few years.
As for the pod piles they are just small piles of rubble that a sixline or wrasse can't get into. They can be rubble, they can just be really porous rock, etc. |
#4
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![]() My 6-line not psycho either, actually find rather interesting how he cruises the current and goes throughout the rock. By competition meant that he's a pod eating machine.
At night with a flash light, tank used to crawl with pods, since getting the wrasse, have to look really hard now to find any. Pod piles just areas of rubble or large pieces of crushed coral. |
#5
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![]() Do Centropyge also eat pods? I used to see tons of them at night (with a flashlight, like Mark), but not so much recently, after adding a Rusty Angelfish.
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#6
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![]() Centropyge's likely do reduce a pod population some. Pretty much anything eats pods really, it's just that mandarins are such ponderous eaters ("Hmmm shall I eat this or not? Hmmmm? Hmmmmm?") that usually if you offer them any prepared foods, that the other tankmates eat up all of it before they get enough of it. Thus, the the need for enough of a live population of pods that the mandarin can work on for other the 23 hours, 55 minutes that you're not there trying to directly feed them. Sometimes you get one that "figures it out" and eats food when offered but that's more an exception than the rule.
Catherine, Mark, I'm glad you trust your sixlines but I'm just posting my experience which in hindsight is a fairly well documented trait with these fish. I too thought "No, my mandarin is a nice fish" ... Lived peacefully with a mandarin for at least a full year after I moved the mandarin in from a different tank that I was taking down. There was no warning or any kind of lead-up to the event, otherwise I could have tried something. Anyhow, forewarned is forearmed. Sixlines are OK fish but they are known to become potentially troublesome as they age.
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-- Tony My next hobby will be flooding my basement while repeatedly banging my head against a brick wall and tearing up $100 bills. Whee! |
#7
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![]() I'm pretty sure I've heard my mom say the exact same thing...in reference to me.
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#8
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![]() Quote:
Last edited by mark; 10-24-2007 at 10:13 PM. |