I find Sand Dollar quite suitable for the job... but not now... let the sand season a little bit more... try not to stir the sandbed too much... so try not to introduce anything too active
Ok I will go look for a solution... will test on a rough piece of glass before applying to the tank... safer that way Actually the scratch is not catastrophic... think positive... it could be much worse
Yeah will do some serious research before making things worse... I was cleaning my magnet cleaner... left the outer part on the desk... somehow the magnet attracted a piece of metal wire (dunno from where)... when I joined the 2 magnets cleaner together and dragged... I knew something went terribly wrong :pinch:
The center portion of the sump is for keeping macroalgae? I will suggest adding more fine sand to that compartment to benefit from the anaerobic bacteria activities living in deep sand bed of 4" and above. It can help reduce Nitrate in the long run. It's difficult to add the sand at a later stage. Just a suggestion Do check with other reefers... see what they think.
All the best
It really depends on what corals you intend to keep, the coral placements and the lighting you use... if you have not decided on any of the 3 factors... perhaps you can adjust the height of the light fixture later on...
Spotted this giant snail trying to cross over :pinch: Super duper stress to the baby clam
Luckily this snail is reef safe... imagine the horror if it isn't reef safe :nuke:
Did something really stupid yesterday... I scratched my tank :cry2: Luckily it's on the outside... any bros/sis here with experience on how to fix it? I am very depressed now
My 4 Ocellaris Clowns have not colonize the RBTA yet Manage to feed it a full cube of mysis... I've never seen a coral eat this fast And the bad news is... it is losing its bubbly tip
Nothing much to reveal bro Hammy... but do you remember the bubbly yuma we bought together last time? I found it in Coralfanatics
Revealing my 2 rare Red Rhodactis sanctithomae Can see its green base under flash photography