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  #1  
Old 09-23-2012, 12:18 AM
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Default Need some advise on sand cleaners please!!

Hi all, I have a DSB and my tank is very tall, I am having a difficult time reaching the bottom to vacuum, I am wondering what everyone's opinion on the best type of fish/creature for cleaning the sand? Any input is appreciated!
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Old 09-23-2012, 12:21 AM
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Diamond Watchman Goby hands down.
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Old 09-23-2012, 03:19 AM
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Diamond goby is the best sand sifter and will keep you sand nice and white, nassarius snails work well into the sand as well as tiger sand conch. I also have a few brown blotch snails buried in my sand bed.
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Old 09-23-2012, 04:26 AM
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conches are great
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Old 09-23-2012, 05:16 AM
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Default sand

i also have some sand dollars in my tank as well as the gobie,snails,crabs etc
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Old 09-23-2012, 08:07 AM
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Thanks very much everyone who put their preference, I really needed the advice! I have somewhere to start now at least!
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Old 09-23-2012, 08:57 AM
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the BEST thing you could possibly do is slowly get rid of your DSB -____-
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Old 09-23-2012, 11:47 AM
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+1 on removing the DSB, they're useless nutrient sinks.
My diamond goby is a great cleaner but digs deep burrows in the sand all the way to the bottom of the tank, not good with a DSB, also buries some of my corals.
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Old 09-23-2012, 03:12 PM
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If you want to keep the DSB then none of the critters anyone listed are DSB-safe! A properly constructed and maintained DSB is a fantastic thing, but most people do not maintain it properly. Yours is a fine example. A properly running DSB will not need to be vacuumed. Consequently, if you are disturbing the sand bed when you are vacuuming you are further damaging it.

Ron Shimek recently wrote a great article about DSB in the Coral Magazine entitles Dragonets (Nov/Dec 2011). Ron Shimek is definitely the DSB expert of the hobby. If you don't have access to the Coral Magazine (you can order back issues online) you can check out Ron's website. http://www.ronshimek.com/deep_sand_beds.html

On the other hand, if you decide to remove the DSB it can be done fairly easily and with low risk provided you don't remove it all at once. I like to use a 5/8" siphon hose which I use to remove the far right 1/4 of the sand bed making a nice straight line in the sand. Immediately replace with very well rinsed sand at the new depth. Make sure you cover any exposed black portions of sand along the edge of old sand that showed up when you siphoned the old stuff out. This is very important because those black portions of sand are unhealthy anaerobic areas that can poision your tank if left exposed. In one week do the same thing for the next 1/4 of the sand bed. If you do it slowly and replace the sand as you go like I describe you will have no problems.

If you remove the old sand bed, don't add any new critters to the sand bed for at least a few months otherwise they will starve in the new somewhat sterile sand. Once the new sand bed is established, I have found Fighting Conches, small Nassarius snails (not the big Tonga ones), and Cerith snails to be very good sand bed cleaners without over-cleaning the sand bed and making it devoid of life like starfish can and will do.
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Old 09-23-2012, 03:14 PM
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Also, when I had a sand sifting fish, my tank was perpetually cloudy with particulate floating around. Now that it's gone, I finally have a clear tank.
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