Clean-up crew for brackish water
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- Puffer Fry
- Posts: 13
- Joined: Thu Mar 16, 2006 2:22 am
- Location: Maryland, USA
Clean-up crew for brackish water
What do you guys use to clean your tanks in a light brackish water set-up? The sg is 1.005. I have a figure 8 puffer and a couple of bumble bee gobies. I put 3 ghost shrimp in today and the fig 8 ate one already. Does anyone have any ideas?? What I mean by clean-up crew is how people keep plecostomous or loaches in freshwater tanks to keep the algae down.
- Phaedrus
- Former Staff Member
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- Joined: Tue Jul 19, 2005 8:34 pm
- Location: Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
- Contact:
Only thing you can do is keep up with regular maintenance. Vaccuum the substrate. Do water changes. Remove uneaten food promptly. Don't overstock, and over filter. When algae forms, as it inevitably does, simply clean it.
If your water is high in phosphates you could try some of the phosphate removal products that are out there. Seachem purigen has helped me keep my nitrates really low, but even that hasn't stopped the might diatom juggernaught.
If your water is high in phosphates you could try some of the phosphate removal products that are out there. Seachem purigen has helped me keep my nitrates really low, but even that hasn't stopped the might diatom juggernaught.
Yup, totally agree with Phaedrus! Only good clean up crew for brackish is a algea pad and a gravel vac
<80 gal> 2 GSPs & a Ceylon!
<75 gal> 3 Figure 8s & 1 Butterlfy Goby
<75 gal> *Empty*
<55 gal> 3 Gymnothorax polyuranodon (FW eel)
<30 long> Pair of Lorteti's & Irrubesco's, 1 DP, Endlers Livebearers, Clown Pleco, Royal Pleco, 2 Bumblebee Cats
<20 long> 4 Flounders
<4 gal> 2 Sparkling Gouramis & 3 ottos heavily planted
~Tihsho~
<75 gal> 3 Figure 8s & 1 Butterlfy Goby
<75 gal> *Empty*
<55 gal> 3 Gymnothorax polyuranodon (FW eel)
<30 long> Pair of Lorteti's & Irrubesco's, 1 DP, Endlers Livebearers, Clown Pleco, Royal Pleco, 2 Bumblebee Cats
<20 long> 4 Flounders
<4 gal> 2 Sparkling Gouramis & 3 ottos heavily planted
~Tihsho~
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- Figure 8 Puffer
- Posts: 109
- Joined: Fri Mar 03, 2006 6:57 pm
- Location: Virginia, USA
Thats basically what brackish entails. And its totally worth it!
<80 gal> 2 GSPs & a Ceylon!
<75 gal> 3 Figure 8s & 1 Butterlfy Goby
<75 gal> *Empty*
<55 gal> 3 Gymnothorax polyuranodon (FW eel)
<30 long> Pair of Lorteti's & Irrubesco's, 1 DP, Endlers Livebearers, Clown Pleco, Royal Pleco, 2 Bumblebee Cats
<20 long> 4 Flounders
<4 gal> 2 Sparkling Gouramis & 3 ottos heavily planted
~Tihsho~
<75 gal> 3 Figure 8s & 1 Butterlfy Goby
<75 gal> *Empty*
<55 gal> 3 Gymnothorax polyuranodon (FW eel)
<30 long> Pair of Lorteti's & Irrubesco's, 1 DP, Endlers Livebearers, Clown Pleco, Royal Pleco, 2 Bumblebee Cats
<20 long> 4 Flounders
<4 gal> 2 Sparkling Gouramis & 3 ottos heavily planted
~Tihsho~
- puffernuke
- Figure 8 Puffer
- Posts: 163
- Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2005 11:36 am
- Location (country): Lake of the Ozarks, MO
- Location: Lake of the Ozarks, MO
- The Fisherman
- Fahaka Puffer
- Posts: 694
- Joined: Sat Jul 09, 2005 2:46 pm
- Location: West Michigan
- Contact:
Yeah and you will be breeding your own puff foodWoland wrote: Yet; some mollies does a bit of cleaning and is a nice addition to a brackish tank.
<80 gal> 2 GSPs & a Ceylon!
<75 gal> 3 Figure 8s & 1 Butterlfy Goby
<75 gal> *Empty*
<55 gal> 3 Gymnothorax polyuranodon (FW eel)
<30 long> Pair of Lorteti's & Irrubesco's, 1 DP, Endlers Livebearers, Clown Pleco, Royal Pleco, 2 Bumblebee Cats
<20 long> 4 Flounders
<4 gal> 2 Sparkling Gouramis & 3 ottos heavily planted
~Tihsho~
<75 gal> 3 Figure 8s & 1 Butterlfy Goby
<75 gal> *Empty*
<55 gal> 3 Gymnothorax polyuranodon (FW eel)
<30 long> Pair of Lorteti's & Irrubesco's, 1 DP, Endlers Livebearers, Clown Pleco, Royal Pleco, 2 Bumblebee Cats
<20 long> 4 Flounders
<4 gal> 2 Sparkling Gouramis & 3 ottos heavily planted
~Tihsho~
Actually my brackish tank has several snails in it. The LFS(a good small one with knowledgeable people) had a few snails in it's brackish tanks last year and I asked about them.
Seems there is a snail that is native to brackish water and they had a few(only come in once a year for some reason). So I picked up about six thinking they would be puffer food(5 bucks a pop).
Needless to say I was pleasantly surprised when they went right to work on the algae and do a great job of cleaning up. I've lost two over the year but they are about to be back in stock so I'll pick up five more.
If it wasn't for those snails the tank would look much worse. They literally strip the algae from the wood and after the algae builds up inside on surfaces for a week and I'm wondering if they are all dead, BAM in one night they will clean it all up. I love em.
The snails are a chocolate brown if that helps anyone. Don't know the name. They are about half an inch in diameter.
Seems there is a snail that is native to brackish water and they had a few(only come in once a year for some reason). So I picked up about six thinking they would be puffer food(5 bucks a pop).
Needless to say I was pleasantly surprised when they went right to work on the algae and do a great job of cleaning up. I've lost two over the year but they are about to be back in stock so I'll pick up five more.
If it wasn't for those snails the tank would look much worse. They literally strip the algae from the wood and after the algae builds up inside on surfaces for a week and I'm wondering if they are all dead, BAM in one night they will clean it all up. I love em.
The snails are a chocolate brown if that helps anyone. Don't know the name. They are about half an inch in diameter.
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- Mentor
- Posts: 6155
- Joined: Tue May 31, 2005 4:39 pm
- Gender: Male
- Location (country): East Coast, USA
The snails are likely Olive Nerites, whixh are at home in a variety of water conditions. Their shells are quite hard, and their normal posture is quite "defensive" in that they expose a bare minimum of flesh to their surroundings, If the puffer is less than a large GSP, the chances of survival are fairly good, but never guaanteed,
Where's the fish? - Neptune
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- Mentor
- Posts: 6155
- Joined: Tue May 31, 2005 4:39 pm
- Gender: Male
- Location (country): East Coast, USA
Their offspring/larvae are planktonic in SW. Most of the genus is marine. The Olive and least one other species travel upstream as far as very light BW to straight FW. Anything BW should suit them, but don't just dump - drip acclimate if they are in quite different conditions.
Where's the fish? - Neptune