never had sexy shrimps but i discovered and removed a 1' long bobbit after 2 years in the hobby
very gruesome worm and slimes like crazy when stressed. incredibly fast and sensitive to any lights other then red lights
imo clown gobies aren't hard fishes. as long you can get a healthy specimen, feeding should come in naturally. i use to keep one before i had sps and it was fine sitting on whatever lps i had. extremely greedy and entertaining. it was one of the fishes i would list as almost indestructible once settled down in a tank
lemon how's this piece doing for you? i've the same one but the polyps lost its blue i've noticed this is the remaining pieces at the shops as well. it did colour up on the branches but i doubt the blue will return on mine
i read on rc that grade a means the 2nd and 3rd bars are connected. if not its a grade b, but having said that there are many grade b's that are nicer and sell alot more than normal grade a's
does look like picassos but not the fancy ones like on the net. only spotted 2 unique pieces, one with a white cap and the other a tear drop on one side, should be still there.
blotchy left 8 pieces, average size 3" not 1.5". 8.5 reds
ah i saw the green/black sun at pinnacle the day before. one of the healthiest and nicest i've seen in awhile thought the polyps were all closed.
piccaso clowns at 2.5 reds?
wow certainly a tempting LED option here, though the length of the set doesn't mean the coverage. for those who wish to keep light demanding corals towards the sides would probably need a larger rated set which would jut out from the tank's length.
looking forward to your reviews!
ah yes ah beng also use to have them on a regular basis before. either that or no one buys but the quality's not as good as GO's. christmas tree worms are okay but the porties didn't seem healthy most of the time
maybe you can try shifting the powerhead alittle near the carpet. it'd probably move away and you could direct where it goes quite surprised that the stock lightings are able to keep corals!
i don't know about this in marine fishes but this vertical u-turn is a big no no when i was still keeping freshwater arowanas. if the fish too long for the width of the tank needs to swim back and froth before turning and over time the gill cover curls back and exposes the gill. This leaves the gill open to injury and disease.
maybe something to take note for your unicorn since it has been with you for so long already