I myself experienced a period when I immersed myself in reef building and in figuring out the right way to a balanced ecosystem. I'm not sure if that was an addiction but I did feel that I was sort of escaping from reality to certain extent. As the system started to mature, I now spend just 10 minutes each day on maintenance works. But meanwhile I spend more time in helping others build reef systems to achieve their goals. This at least brings me back to reality a little bit. :)
Probably the only high end reef tank with some soft corals aside from zoas there are even nps corals to which most hobbyist forget that they even exist
I've watched a lot of content on RUclips about reef tanks and I'd have to say this is one the best. The detail regarding inhabitants is fantastic, as well as the reasoning behind it. Not to mention that this is the most beautiful reef tank I have ever seen. Take a bow sir as your tank is awe inspiring and jaw dropping.
Your tank is one of the most beautiful tank i've seen and is also extremely well maintained with no algae on the glass or substrate. You also did an excellent job in capturing the beauty of your tank with good lighting and video skills. You've got yourself a new subscriber.
Thank you White Knight! Algae combat was my paramount task in the first 6 months. I’m going to shoot a footage on how to keep the sand bed white and clean.
This is hands down the most beautiful aquarium I have ever seen it's literally Unbelievable it must have taken a decade to grow into this amazing Reef system Wowow
Thank you Larry! Although most corals were bought as colonies, all of them have seen substantial growths in the past two years. I have fragged nems, will do leathers and SPS too, which I'm going to talk about in my future episodes.
Beautiful tank, meticulously planned and executed. You must be very proud and you deserve all the plaudits you are inevitably going to receive. Bravo 👏 👏 👏 🏴💚❤🐠
I have been watching reef videos for a few weeks, this is probably the best one i have seen so far. amazing job and a beautiful tank! keep up the great work.
Wow ! You blew my mind .. Excellent knowledge you have What a marvellous presentation ! I watched lots of good knowledgeable videos on reef tanks , but this one is the best I have ever watched… Thanks alot for such knowledge.
@@zzyz : where do you live? I am based in Hong Kong. I am amazed with the diversity in your tank. Especially anemone and Garden Eel. I have a 24” cube waterbox which is 8 months old and trying to create a mixed reef.
@@yatisharon8324 Thank you! I also live in Hong Kong. Tank water typically starts to mature in roughly 6 months. 8 months is a good starting point to add live stocks to your 24" cube waterbox. You can begin with clean up crew, followed by fish, docile ones first, and then leathers, nems, LPS corals, finally SPS. Good luck and happy reefing!
I am absolutely in love with your set up! I'm about to start up a marine tank again, so if I can bring mine up to the standards of yours, I'll be a very happy man! Well done you, absolutely beautiful reef tank 😍👌🏽
Well, I have plenty of time at the moment, I think we all do, so there will be nothing but time and love to put into my tank. Thank you for the encouragement and I'll hopefully share it with you as soon as I get it running. 😊👌🏽
Hi Roger - just found your channel after seeing the white sand bed video pop up - really nice advice and the music and voiceover is great! Well done ;) Happy Holidays
Rog this was soooo helpful…. I’ve never heard anyone explain all this like you have done in your tank before. I’m just about to start off my tank… Wish you lived next door buddy ! 🙌 Amazing Amazing tank & set up 🥳
Thank you Michigan. I bought colonies but almost all of them have gone through substantial growth except for one piece not seen much growth. I'm still looking into that. Maybe that is a slow growing SPS species that requires more patience.
Simply amazing! I had a 91gal tank myself about a year ago and I had a bad gha outbreak but nothing I did worked. It was my first tank and I eventually had to break it down. It's in storage now but I will be using this video as reference next time I build my tank up again. Love this tank man and it's truly very inspiring! I HAVE to subscribe, can't wait for more content from you.
Thank you Alexander! GHA are indeed nightmare. Few cleanup crew eat them. Although tuxedo urchin sometimes consume GHA when they are hungry, it becomes difficult to get rid of GHA once they are everywhere. Having an algae reactor and algae eaters to curb their growth at the early stage of the cycle is the key.
@@zzyz i have had a 60 lps cube for almost two years. Pretty good growth with those easier hammers, elegances, acans, bubble coral rock flowers and a scoly but i have not dabbed into sps yet. I want to start with a hardier species of montipora. Im just amazed how full your tank looks with all the variety!
Sounds awesome! When you try SPS corals, remember to keep your alkalinity stable and NO3 low. And when you procure from LFS, do pick those with noticeable growth. SPS corals without growth are usually slowly dying. Moreover, it will be easy to fix them on live rocks if you choose the fast growing species, which will encrust nearby rocks in a week or two.
yes i think my main issue is not monitoring my current display tank as much as i should. That along with my lack of experience with dosing i only replenish calcium alk and magnesium with water changes and i test twice a week before and after water change so id need ad to ramp up the testing if i want to feel comfortable with sps. Much appreciated for the advice and info i hope to see many future updates on your tank!
With water changes only, chemicals will be constantly declining. Dosing is a must to keep stability, not only for base chemicals, but also trace elements. SPS coloration is very sensitive to various minor chemicals. An SPS colony may look entirely different in different tanks. The next episode will be on the husbandry of goni/alveopora. Thanks for watching.
you sir just got another sub, great channel!! Would love to see a video of ur maintaince routine and equipment tour to see what makes this wonderful reef tick and what you do to keep it doing so aswell
I've had two captive bred clown fish for 2+ years. I have a tank with 20+ anemones. They didn't touch one of them. A couple months ago I got a huge green anemone. It's split into 4 pieces since then. Two bigger pieces are in my display. They grew and grew and all of a sudden I noticed that the clowns we're hosting it. They've been hosting it ever since. Idk of they figured it out over time or of it was the type and size of the anemone. Whatever happened, it's awesome!
Great to hear that! I think you were lucky. Captive bred species are known to stay away from anemones, especially those three generations bred in captivity.
Wow! Im so happy to hear from your response speed. I want to and will watch the videos again....once i have the names of those creatures....also the biological terms that you are researching from first point of enthused personal experience till the point when we first interacted and fair reached for belonging grace together. Thank you so much for giving us a chance to relate on such things. Do you have others you talk to about those things in that tank perfectly placed with style and divine hope to help us feel whole and fullfilled in our resolving lives. I want to to start with how you knew about arragements of corals and sponges. Helping feel pleasurable and supported by compatible forms of life. You just seem so beautiful by the way you presented your caring interest of the tank and all the descriptions you have put together from expertise and organized experience. Also the polyps? If im spelling it correctly. And said something about them in a way i want to know and learn from you. Your credit is your credit. My credit can be from your credit. Super cool thing. Im really looking forward to work with you more. What is your status? You work alone or have people with similar agendas for such research opportunity's?
Hi Jonathan, thank you for your kind words! Not sure why your msg was banned from RUclips. I just received your msg a moment ago. I benefited a lot from an App called Reef App where you can find most tank inhabitants, knowing their characters and compatibility. I also learnt a great deal from online forums and by trial and error. I'm not very certain what you mean by polyps. If you were talking about polyp extension, it's pretty much related to stability in water chemistry, especially alkalinity. I also found that polyps would extend to their maximum at relatively lower alkalinity and nitrate levels.
Yes l, i will try to get that app, thanks for the references. i will do more research, so were you into the waters and film selectments that might be secreted by those sponges and hydra. Polyp extention seem perverted. Pardon my liberty of interpretation. Thanks so much.
YOUR REEF IS FULL OF LIFE. ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL AND A REMINDER OF WHAT WE STAND TO LOSE IF WE DON’T GET WITH THE PROGRAM IN ADDRESSING HUMAN CAUSED CLIMATE CHANGE. THE CORAL REEFS NEED OUR HELP. LET’S DO WHAT WE NEED TO DO TO SAVE OUR PLANET’S BIODIVERSITY.
Thank you Graham. Can’t agree more. Climate change and nutrient pollution may lead to harmful algal blooms, killing the very bottom of the food chain. As Sadhguru, an Indian yogi said, without human beings the planet would flourish, but it would have only 8 years left should micro creatures disappear. The question is not how useful we are but how beautifully we live.
Life forms adapt - I agree. Research shows that sponges have an adaptive advantage that allows them to have better survival to thermal stress compared to corals. As global warming continues, sponges may take over corals to dominate the reef.
Just found your channel, what a fantastic mixed reef tank and diversity of life👌 I have a 100 gallon tank with a Tomini tang and would love to add a Yellow tang but not sure if my tanks big enough for 2 tangs although the Tomini is the smallest tang available. Great content, subscribed 👍
Thank you Mark! 🙏 They won’t be friends for sure, but might not fight to deaths. I usually put the newly added fish in a breeder box for a week or two to let it make acquaintance with its fellow tank mates and relieve stress. My yellow tang occasionally had conflicts with the rabbit fish as both of them are herbivores, but most of the time they got along.
@@RavineDriver Put it in a breeder box, make sure it is getting familiar with all types of artificial food you usually feed the tank, and let it see its tank mates, get acquainted with them before adding in.
@@zzyz I think one blue tang could work for right now and grow it out for a larger tank down the road . Yeah I know they get big but if you can get a bigger tank it would be worth it . Another fish that may look good in your tank is a yellow head jawfish . Very peaceful fish . And scooter blennys . Yellow tangs would work too . Keep a close eye on that puffer.
Thank you for your great suggestions! The yellowhead jawfish looks cool. Will be a good addition to the bottom feeder fish. Scooters are similar to mandarins I suppose. And yes, I kept the yellow box fish out of the main tank to prevent it from releasing toxins under stress. I would definitely consider a blue tang should I have enough space. But a yellow tang is fit for the moment as it hasn’t grown much in the past 12 months.
Hi Roger I just ran across this video. You have an absolutely amazing tank ..i have a 65 gallon. Mixed reef about 4 years old now . Established tank but I definitely learned a few things by watching this video..I have a problem with keeping acans ..they just don't do well in my tank . I feed them reef roids once a week with a little brine shrimp every now and then . I have two tangs and a six line wrasse, thats all the fish I have. I have torch corals, Duncan corals toadstool leather thats way smaller than yours , trumpets various mushrooms montapora, blastoma, and a few others , can't name them all right now..lol but my tank is getting crowded.. I run two original hydra first gen lights red sea skimmer a sump with carbon and phosphate pads one koralia wave maker..I keep my salinity about .025 and temp about 78 degrees F so I think my problem with acans is placement do you agree or do you think there is something else I might be doing wrong..?
Wow, that's a mature tank fully stocked! Thank you for sharing your stories. I once put my acan on a live rock. It opened well for a while and all of a sudden closed up overnight. I looked into the problem and found a brittle starfish was harassing the acan. I moved it to the sand bed and it has been wonderful ever since. However, not all corals will be doing well on the sand. For instance, bottom feeders such as sexy shrimps prefer to eat (or harass) hammer or frogspawn corals even though they are perfectly healthy.
Thank you for the advice about not adding two fish of the same kind in a tank under 200 gallon. I have two blue chromis now that are fighting. My reef 🪸 tank is 25 gallon. My single clown is a killer, my pink damsel also chases the chromis. I wonder if I remove one chromis will that curve things down?🤔
Beautiful, amazing, peaceful…. I have a 180 gallon, 8 month old reef tank with 3 of 20k MHs with 4 of T5s. All the corals (sps,lps,mushrooms…) doing well and grows but failed most of the anemones. Just disappeared or melted away… Any recommendations? May be too strong light(?). Thanks.
Wow, 180 gallon is epic. Nems love lights no matter how strong they are, base on my experience. Wonder if there are other creatures bothering / eating them, such as peppermint shrimps of certain species.
If you ever have the time to, could you please make a list of everything in your tank? Such as coral, fish, crustacean, etc. You have a wonderful reef tank, would love to do more research into how everything plays a role in this organization.
I’ve been dreaming of a white sand bed for 8 years....would you say your sea cucumber is key to attaining that? And are there types of cucumbers to stay away from? What size is your tank? Mine is 65gal.
@@RavineDriver I wouldn't say sea cucumber is the key. All of the measures mentioned in the video are jointly helpful. But sea cucumber is definitely the more effective creature than any other cleanup crew alone. I have a tiger tail and a black cucumber. I don't personally have experiences in other species. My tank is 70 gal, about the same size as yours.
@@zzyz taking the time to do my research while I wait for the 29g sump to be plumbed. I want a that thing loaded with cheato and pods. Probly gonna go predominantly softies to start with. On the bright side I learned the light i bought for 40 bucks apparently used to run like 900.
@@connerbixby6532 Sound gorgeous! Would appreciate it very much if you come back and share with us how corals respond to this lighting setup in the near future!
Really a nice and very balanced tank,many compliments,and by the way you are a valued host! I would like to ask you some more and specific information regarding the care you have for your nice tubeworm;do you feed them,if yes wich products exactly you use in wich quantity and how many times a day and also by target feeding or broadcast,manually or using dosing pump? Please let me know also wich kind of sand you have used and exact grain size. Thank you very much and keep posting video of your beautiful tank.
Thank you, my pleasure! I don't have additional care for tubeworms. Broadcast feeding phyto and zooplanktons mixed with amino acids two times everyday. I've tried Brightwell, Red Sea, and Tropic Marin in line with their specified average dosing. My personal favorite is Brightwell Phyto Green M and Zooplanktos M, 2ml each, for both morning and evening feedings. Red Sea Reef Energy AB alone cannot sustain gonioporas while Tropic Marin products are more nutrients rich. I feed manually, as coral food usually sediment to the bottom, each time you need to shake well before use, hence difficult to dose. In terms of sand, I use Red Sea live sand.
Thank you so much! Just put them in nearby rock crevices and they will open up next to each other. Make sure that you have branching live rocks around the crevices as stands for them to lean on. They will not move if they feel comfy. Anemones don't like flow hitting their feet. Find some peaceful rock crevices for them and they will likely stay still.
@@lpasse Yes, they love flow, but not so much as in from of a powerhead. They tend not to bubble up under high flow. Let's see if it can stay put for a long period of time.
What a beautiful mixed reef. I'm really scared to take the plunge into corals. They seem like they're so hard to take care of. I have a 125 gallon I just set up this past month. Should I wait until the Nitrogen Cycle is complete before jumping into corals?
Thank you so much! Yes, you shall definitely wait for the nitrogen cycle to complete (3-6 months) before you introduce corals to the tank. While you are waiting, you may have your clean up crew in place and start to cultivate algae in the reactor.
For sure one of the best mixed reef tanks I've ever seen. I'm thinking of setting up a Red Sea Peninsula 500, would you mind listing the equipment you're using? It would help me a lot. Thank you!
Thank you! Peninsula looks gorgeous! You will be proud of it. I talked about hardware, circulation and filtration in my last episode. I'll continue to discuss flow, lighting and useful gadgets in future updates. For your information, other than the equipment already included in Peninsula, you still need the following: - Chiller with pump - Skimmer with pump - Algae reactor with pump - Bio rings - Return pump - Wave makers - Lights - Filter floss - Active carbon
One of the best mixed reef tanks i've ever seen.
Thank you Paul! Glad you liked it.
I myself experienced a period when I immersed myself in reef building and in figuring out the right way to a balanced ecosystem. I'm not sure if that was an addiction but I did feel that I was sort of escaping from reality to certain extent. As the system started to mature, I now spend just 10 minutes each day on maintenance works. But meanwhile I spend more time in helping others build reef systems to achieve their goals. This at least brings me back to reality a little bit. :)
Probably the only high end reef tank with some soft corals aside from zoas there are even nps corals to which most hobbyist forget that they even exist
I've watched a lot of content on RUclips about reef tanks and I'd have to say this is one the best. The detail regarding inhabitants is fantastic, as well as the reasoning behind it.
Not to mention that this is the most beautiful reef tank I have ever seen. Take a bow sir as your tank is awe inspiring and jaw dropping.
I felt exactly the same way... Just kidding :) Thank you so much for your kind words. Much obliged!
One of the best videos I ever seen, what a beautiful tank and a peaceful way that you talk and explaining your thoughts!
Thank you Carlos! Glad you enjoyed it!
Your tank is one of the most beautiful tank i've seen and is also extremely well maintained with no algae on the glass or substrate. You also did an excellent job in capturing the beauty of your tank with good lighting and video skills. You've got yourself a new subscriber.
Thank you White Knight! Algae combat was my paramount task in the first 6 months. I’m going to shoot a footage on how to keep the sand bed white and clean.
This is the absolute best reef aquarium video to date. I wish you had a million tanks so we could all enjoy the many varied topics
This is the most beautiful tank I’ve seen in my life
Incredibly beautiful tank. Just beautiful!
Regards Duzzy🇦🇺
This is the most beautiful tank I've seen on RUclips so far. Absolutely perfect in my eyes.
Thank you Kevin. Much obliged!
Just ran across this video. Excellent rundown and your tank is something to envy.
Glad you enjoyed. Thank you Alex!
This is hands down the most beautiful aquarium I have ever seen it's literally Unbelievable it must have taken a decade to grow into this amazing Reef system Wowow
Thank you Larry! Although most corals were bought as colonies, all of them have seen substantial growths in the past two years. I have fragged nems, will do leathers and SPS too, which I'm going to talk about in my future episodes.
Beautiful tank, meticulously planned and executed. You must be very proud and you deserve all the plaudits you are inevitably going to receive. Bravo 👏 👏 👏 🏴💚❤🐠
Thank you, much obliged 🙏
I love the garden eel, it's awesome. Amazing tank and lovely talk... great work!
Thank you so much! Glad you liked it.
I thoroughly enjoyed your tank tour, you have an amazing little ecosystem. I have subscribed and will be looking forward to future updates,👍
Thank you Aussie for your kind support! The upcoming update will be on the rearing of garden eels in a mixed reef environment.
I have been watching reef videos for a few weeks, this is probably the best one i have seen so far. amazing job and a beautiful tank! keep up the great work.
The best reef tank I have ever seen by far
The corals, the fishes, the decorations iz all purrrfectly amazing 🥺
Thank you!
I just cannot get over the colouration of these corals it’s insane
Really cool info about the sardine, going to see if I can find one for my tank!
Thank you Carl. I caught them on tide pool at night, when they tended to be less alert than in the day.
Absolutely stunning tank! Probably the most diverse tank I've seen! Great job!
Thank you so much! Glad you liked it.
ABSOLUTELY amazing tank! Inspirational....I wish you lived next door!
Thank you so much, much obliged!
Wow ! You blew my mind ..
Excellent knowledge you have
What a marvellous presentation !
I watched lots of good knowledgeable videos on reef tanks , but this one is the best I have ever watched…
Thanks alot for such knowledge.
I enjoyed this video. So much good footage and an amazing tank.
Thanks for visiting!
Incredible video!
This is one of the nicest tanks I've seen.
It is like watching a documentary, love it and your reef tank is beautiful! Very well explained ! Looking forward for your next video!
Thank you so much for your kind words. I shall keep up the effort!
Good video man, I have watched it 3 times back to back and adding it to my list👍👍👍
Thank you TRAY NICE! Glad you enjoyed it.
You have quite an investment in corals/inverts there. What a wonderful, beautiful display.
Great reef tank! Good job! Nice mixture.
Top pick amongst mixed reef tanks 👍
Thank you so much!
@@zzyz : where do you live? I am based in Hong Kong. I am amazed with the diversity in your tank. Especially anemone and Garden Eel. I have a 24” cube waterbox which is 8 months old and trying to create a mixed reef.
@@yatisharon8324 Thank you! I also live in Hong Kong. Tank water typically starts to mature in roughly 6 months. 8 months is a good starting point to add live stocks to your 24" cube waterbox. You can begin with clean up crew, followed by fish, docile ones first, and then leathers, nems, LPS corals, finally SPS. Good luck and happy reefing!
So much diversity!! Great video I could watch this tank for hours 👍👍
Thank you CrackerJack! You and me both!
I am absolutely in love with your set up!
I'm about to start up a marine tank again, so if I can bring mine up to the standards of yours, I'll be a very happy man!
Well done you, absolutely beautiful reef tank 😍👌🏽
Thank you so much! I wish you great luck with your new endeavors!
Thank you very much 😁
If I get my set up even half as good as yours I'll be happy! 😉👌🏽
@@timdogdawg4099 You can be better for sure. It just takes time!
Well, I have plenty of time at the moment, I think we all do, so there will be nothing but time and love to put into my tank.
Thank you for the encouragement and I'll hopefully share it with you as soon as I get it running. 😊👌🏽
@@timdogdawg4099 Great! Do share with us your findings. Really appreciate that!
Absolutely stunning aquarium! Thank you for making this terrifically-informative video!
Hi Roger - just found your channel after seeing the white sand bed video pop up - really nice advice and the music and voiceover is great! Well done ;) Happy Holidays
Thank you Sunny. Glad you liked it! Wishing you a year full of love and blessings!
Super fantastic video and saltwater aquarium too... Thanks for sharing..
Thank you so much! My pleasure.
This is the first video of yours I've watched and now you've got a new subscriber. Keep up your incredible work!
Thank you so much! Appreciate you liked it!
thank you for your video! Very informative , new reefer of 2 years and always learning from my mistakes and great videos such as this !
Thank you Laura. Glad you liked it!
Rog this was soooo helpful….
I’ve never heard anyone explain all this like you have done in your tank before.
I’m just about to start off my tank…
Wish you lived next door buddy ! 🙌
Amazing Amazing tank & set up 🥳
Thank you so much! Patience is the key. Time cures everything. I wish you a great start with your dream tank!
Always will support a skilled reefer, good stuff dude
Thank you Mason, much obliged!
Thank you Michigan. I bought colonies but almost all of them have gone through substantial growth except for one piece not seen much growth. I'm still looking into that. Maybe that is a slow growing SPS species that requires more patience.
What excellent and useful information. Loved the tour of this reef!
Thank you Paul! My pleasure.
Stunning tank! One of the most species diverse tanks I have ever seen; great work!
Thank you Andrew! I appreciate your kind words.
Simply amazing! I had a 91gal tank myself about a year ago and I had a bad gha outbreak but nothing I did worked. It was my first tank and I eventually had to break it down. It's in storage now but I will be using this video as reference next time I build my tank up again. Love this tank man and it's truly very inspiring! I HAVE to subscribe, can't wait for more content from you.
Thank you Alexander! GHA are indeed nightmare. Few cleanup crew eat them. Although tuxedo urchin sometimes consume GHA when they are hungry, it becomes difficult to get rid of GHA once they are everywhere. Having an algae reactor and algae eaters to curb their growth at the early stage of the cycle is the key.
@@zzyz Thank you for the advice! I'm definitely taking my time with my next build
@@alexandersouza1144 My pleasure! Good luck with your next build!
Gorgeous tank!!! So full and well cared for, I hope my tanks can look this good one day!
Thank you Sam. You can do it. It just takes time to cycle. Best of luck!
@@zzyz i have had a 60 lps cube for almost two years. Pretty good growth with those easier hammers, elegances, acans, bubble coral rock flowers and a scoly but i have not dabbed into sps yet. I want to start with a hardier species of montipora. Im just amazed how full your tank looks with all the variety!
Sounds awesome! When you try SPS corals, remember to keep your alkalinity stable and NO3 low. And when you procure from LFS, do pick those with noticeable growth. SPS corals without growth are usually slowly dying. Moreover, it will be easy to fix them on live rocks if you choose the fast growing species, which will encrust nearby rocks in a week or two.
yes i think my main issue is not monitoring my current display tank as much as i should. That along with my lack of experience with dosing i only replenish calcium alk and magnesium with water changes and i test twice a week before and after water change so id need ad to ramp up the testing if i want to feel comfortable with sps. Much appreciated for the advice and info i hope to see many future updates on your tank!
With water changes only, chemicals will be constantly declining. Dosing is a must to keep stability, not only for base chemicals, but also trace elements. SPS coloration is very sensitive to various minor chemicals. An SPS colony may look entirely different in different tanks. The next episode will be on the husbandry of goni/alveopora. Thanks for watching.
So beautiful aquarium, very colorful.
Best video and lays out in a detailed way what I intend to create
A beautiful tank. Lots of different species.
Thank you Annie 🙏
I want a saltwater tank so bad but I usually travel during breaks. Such a fascinating hobby.
I'm leaving my tank alone for a month hope it survives.
By far the best tank I have ever Seen I just wish you didn’t stop making videos but good luck with life anyways
PLEEEASE do more videos on this tank or in general!!!! AMAZINGLY INSPIRING!!!👍👍👍
Thank you! That's the plan, more to come.
@@zzyz Good to know!! And thank you for the reply. Looking for to it!!
you sir just got another sub, great channel!! Would love to see a video of ur maintaince routine and equipment tour to see what makes this wonderful reef tick and what you do to keep it doing so aswell
Thank you Magroth! Really appreciate that! Sure, I'll do episodes on system and maintenance in the future.
I've had two captive bred clown fish for 2+ years. I have a tank with 20+ anemones. They didn't touch one of them. A couple months ago I got a huge green anemone. It's split into 4 pieces since then. Two bigger pieces are in my display. They grew and grew and all of a sudden I noticed that the clowns we're hosting it. They've been hosting it ever since. Idk of they figured it out over time or of it was the type and size of the anemone. Whatever happened, it's awesome!
Great to hear that! I think you were lucky. Captive bred species are known to stay away from anemones, especially those three generations bred in captivity.
Such a beautiful tank.
Thank you 🙏
Very nice specimens, thank you for posting
Thank you for watching!
Great different types of reef tank and species setup and info subbed
Thank you Mo. I appreciate your kind words!
Awesome video , beautiful tank and video was informative !!!!
Thank you Paul! My pleasure.
Thank you so much roger! I got lot of questions for you. I excited to hear back from you.
You are very welcome Jonathan. Let me know your questions anytime.
Wow! Im so happy to hear from your response speed. I want to and will watch the videos again....once i have the names of those creatures....also the biological terms that you are researching from first point of enthused personal experience till the point when we first interacted and fair reached for belonging grace together. Thank you so much for giving us a chance to relate on such things. Do you have others you talk to about those things in that tank perfectly placed with style and divine hope to help us feel whole and fullfilled in our resolving lives.
I want to to start with how you knew about arragements of corals and sponges. Helping feel pleasurable and supported by compatible forms of life. You just seem so beautiful by the way you presented your caring interest of the tank and all the descriptions you have put together from expertise and organized experience. Also the polyps? If im spelling it correctly. And said something about them in a way i want to know and learn from you. Your credit is your credit. My credit can be from your credit. Super cool thing. Im really looking forward to work with you more. What is your status?
You work alone or have people with similar agendas for such research opportunity's?
Hi Jonathan, thank you for your kind words! Not sure why your msg was banned from RUclips. I just received your msg a moment ago. I benefited a lot from an App called Reef App where you can find most tank inhabitants, knowing their characters and compatibility. I also learnt a great deal from online forums and by trial and error. I'm not very certain what you mean by polyps. If you were talking about polyp extension, it's pretty much related to stability in water chemistry, especially alkalinity. I also found that polyps would extend to their maximum at relatively lower alkalinity and nitrate levels.
Yes l, i will try to get that app,
thanks for the references.
i will do more research, so were you into the waters and film selectments that might be secreted by those sponges and hydra. Polyp extention seem perverted. Pardon my liberty of interpretation. Thanks so much.
@@jonathansantos2271 Thank you! I filmed from outside of the tank by iPhone 12 pro with an optical filter to filter out the blue light.
You have a beautiful tank.
Thank you 🙏
Very beautiful mixed reef. Great video and info. I subbed. 👋👋
Thank you so much!
YOUR REEF IS FULL OF LIFE. ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL AND A REMINDER OF WHAT WE STAND TO LOSE IF WE DON’T GET WITH THE PROGRAM IN ADDRESSING HUMAN CAUSED CLIMATE CHANGE. THE CORAL REEFS NEED OUR HELP. LET’S DO WHAT WE NEED TO DO TO SAVE OUR PLANET’S BIODIVERSITY.
Thank you Graham. Can’t agree more. Climate change and nutrient pollution may lead to harmful algal blooms, killing the very bottom of the food chain. As Sadhguru, an Indian yogi said, without human beings the planet would flourish, but it would have only 8 years left should micro creatures disappear. The question is not how useful we are but how beautifully we live.
@@zzyz My opinion is the death of our reefs is pollution from humans and cruise ships. Climate has been changing forever life forms adapt.
Life forms adapt - I agree. Research shows that sponges have an adaptive advantage that allows them to have better survival to thermal stress compared to corals. As global warming continues, sponges may take over corals to dominate the reef.
Beautiful tank.
Thank you 🙏
What an amazing video
Thank you so much!
Just found your channel, what a fantastic mixed reef tank and diversity of life👌 I have a 100 gallon tank with a Tomini tang and would love to add a Yellow tang but not sure if my tanks big enough for 2 tangs although the Tomini is the smallest tang available. Great content, subscribed 👍
Thank you Mark! 🙏 They won’t be friends for sure, but might not fight to deaths. I usually put the newly added fish in a breeder box for a week or two to let it make acquaintance with its fellow tank mates and relieve stress. My yellow tang occasionally had conflicts with the rabbit fish as both of them are herbivores, but most of the time they got along.
Great!! Thank you for sharing your experience.
Thank you, my pleasure!
Very beautiful reef aquarium. The back ground music is hi .
Thank you! I've changed background music in recent updates due to negative comments.
I didn't know you could add a garden eel to a mixed tank. Soo cool! :)
Garden eels are very docile. A gradual and gentle acclimation process is needed. Good luck! :)
Roger. What is a docile and gentle acclimation exactly?
@@RavineDriver Put it in a breeder box, make sure it is getting familiar with all types of artificial food you usually feed the tank, and let it see its tank mates, get acquainted with them before adding in.
Roger your tank looks like a scene out of Finding Nemo . Absolutely gorgeous .
Thank you Kevin. I wish I could have a blue tang as in the movie, but tangs do fight in a 70 gallon.
@@zzyz I think one blue tang could work for right now and grow it out for a larger tank down the road . Yeah I know they get big but if you can get a bigger tank it would be worth it . Another fish that may look good in your tank is a yellow head jawfish . Very peaceful fish . And scooter blennys . Yellow tangs would work too . Keep a close eye on that puffer.
Thank you for your great suggestions! The yellowhead jawfish looks cool. Will be a good addition to the bottom feeder fish. Scooters are similar to mandarins I suppose. And yes, I kept the yellow box fish out of the main tank to prevent it from releasing toxins under stress. I would definitely consider a blue tang should I have enough space. But a yellow tang is fit for the moment as it hasn’t grown much in the past 12 months.
Hey thanks for making this video Roger.
My pleasure. Thank you Benjamin.
Very beautiful - thank you for your efforts
Thank you Otana! My pleasure.
I love this setup amazing work beautiful 🙏🏾
Thank you! 🤗
That tanks looks great
wow that is an amazing tank
Thank you Tom!
Hi Roger I just ran across this video. You have an absolutely amazing tank ..i have a 65 gallon. Mixed reef about 4 years old now . Established tank but I definitely learned a few things by watching this video..I have a problem with keeping acans ..they just don't do well in my tank . I feed them reef roids once a week with a little brine shrimp every now and then . I have two tangs and a six line wrasse, thats all the fish I have. I have torch corals, Duncan corals toadstool leather thats way smaller than yours , trumpets various mushrooms montapora, blastoma, and a few others , can't name them all right now..lol but my tank is getting crowded.. I run two original hydra first gen lights red sea skimmer a sump with carbon and phosphate pads one koralia wave maker..I keep my salinity about .025 and temp about 78 degrees F so I think my problem with acans is placement do you agree or do you think there is something else I might be doing wrong..?
Wow, that's a mature tank fully stocked! Thank you for sharing your stories. I once put my acan on a live rock. It opened well for a while and all of a sudden closed up overnight. I looked into the problem and found a brittle starfish was harassing the acan. I moved it to the sand bed and it has been wonderful ever since. However, not all corals will be doing well on the sand. For instance, bottom feeders such as sexy shrimps prefer to eat (or harass) hammer or frogspawn corals even though they are perfectly healthy.
Thank you soo much for explaining nicely 🥰
Hello, your aquarium is amazing!
How do you control Xenia from overtaking?
Thank you for the advice about not adding two fish of the same kind in a tank under 200 gallon. I have two blue chromis now that are fighting.
My reef 🪸 tank is 25 gallon. My single clown is a killer, my pink damsel also chases the chromis.
I wonder if I remove one chromis will that curve things down?🤔
Awesome video
Thank you 🙏
Such a beautiful tank... I can't put my finger on anything about it that I don't like.
That is a seriously inspiring reef organization 👍🏻 #goals
Thank you! It's always been fun observing the interactions among tank inhabitants, sometimes enticing and inspiring.
@@zzyz I believe it!! Your tank has to be one of my favorites I’ve ever seen
@@ndTheArgonauts Thank you, much obliged! 🙏
How is this possible to have a reef looking this good
Thank you mkvvv, much obliged!
Beautiful, amazing, peaceful….
I have a 180 gallon, 8 month old reef tank with 3 of 20k MHs with 4 of T5s. All the corals (sps,lps,mushrooms…) doing well and grows but failed most of the anemones. Just disappeared or melted away…
Any recommendations? May be too strong light(?). Thanks.
Wow, 180 gallon is epic. Nems love lights no matter how strong they are, base on my experience. Wonder if there are other creatures bothering / eating them, such as peppermint shrimps of certain species.
If you ever have the time to, could you please make a list of everything in your tank? Such as coral, fish, crustacean, etc. You have a wonderful reef tank, would love to do more research into how everything plays a role in this organization.
Thanks Ernesto. For your information:
- Corals: toadstool leather, finger leather, torch, frogspawn, goniopora, alveopora, brain, acan, zoa, grass polyps, clove polyps, sun polyps, mushroom, acropora and montipora
- Nems: green and red bubble tip anemones
- Fish: anthias, yellow tang, clownfish, tailspot blenny, lawnmower blenny, chromis, damselfish, cardinal fish, royal gramma, pipefish, goby, sardine and garden eel
- Crustaceans: blue leg hermit crab, peppermint shrimp, cleaner shrimp, sexy shrimp, anemone shrimp, pistol shrimp and acropora crab
- Tubeworms, bivalves and echinoderms: red fanworm, sea shell, mussel, giant clam, black cucumber, tigertail, tuxedo urchin and turbo snail
I’ve been dreaming of a white sand bed for 8 years....would you say your sea cucumber is key to attaining that? And are there types of cucumbers to stay away from? What size is your tank? Mine is 65gal.
@@RavineDriver I wouldn't say sea cucumber is the key. All of the measures mentioned in the video are jointly helpful. But sea cucumber is definitely the more effective creature than any other cleanup crew alone. I have a tiger tail and a black cucumber. I don't personally have experiences in other species. My tank is 70 gal, about the same size as yours.
Beautiful man,thanks for the video!
My pleasure Mikey and thank you too!
Will be converting my 120 soon and will definitely be looking at this vid again for stocking tips.
Thank you! And wish you great luck with your new tank!
@@zzyz taking the time to do my research while I wait for the 29g sump to be plumbed. I want a that thing loaded with cheato and pods. Probly gonna go predominantly softies to start with. On the bright side I learned the light i bought for 40 bucks apparently used to run like 900.
@@connerbixby6532 Great to hear that! Would you please share with us what the light you bought?
@@zzyz It is an older corallife oddysea model. 48" fixture 4 100w actinics, 2 175w metal halides, and 3 blue leds down the middle.
@@connerbixby6532 Sound gorgeous! Would appreciate it very much if you come back and share with us how corals respond to this lighting setup in the near future!
3:25 LOL! So funny. I've never seen this before.
Thank you. It's indeed funny! I confirmed with a few reefers that clownfish do love sucking nems.
What a beauty this tank is. Stunning. I wish my tank looks similar. I have two mixed reefs. 60 and 20.
Which tank it is???
Thank you 🙏 Mine is Red Sea 250, close to your bigger tank.
Can you do more mixed reef videos. I’m starting on in my 40 Gallon Breeder tank
Sure, thanks for watching. The next episode will be on flow and lighting.
Really a nice and very balanced tank,many compliments,and by the way you are a valued host!
I would like to ask you some more and specific information regarding the care you have for your nice tubeworm;do you feed them,if yes wich products exactly you use in wich quantity and how many times a day and also by target feeding or broadcast,manually or using dosing pump?
Please let me know also wich kind of sand you have used and exact grain size.
Thank you very much and keep posting video of your beautiful tank.
Thank you, my pleasure! I don't have additional care for tubeworms. Broadcast feeding phyto and zooplanktons mixed with amino acids two times everyday. I've tried Brightwell, Red Sea, and Tropic Marin in line with their specified average dosing. My personal favorite is Brightwell Phyto Green M and Zooplanktos M, 2ml each, for both morning and evening feedings. Red Sea Reef Energy AB alone cannot sustain gonioporas while Tropic Marin products are more nutrients rich. I feed manually, as coral food usually sediment to the bottom, each time you need to shake well before use, hence difficult to dose. In terms of sand, I use Red Sea live sand.
Wow - beautiful! How did you get the bubble tip anemones next to each other? And how do you keep them from moving?
Thank you so much! Just put them in nearby rock crevices and they will open up next to each other. Make sure that you have branching live rocks around the crevices as stands for them to lean on. They will not move if they feel comfy. Anemones don't like flow hitting their feet. Find some peaceful rock crevices for them and they will likely stay still.
@@zzyz Thanks Robert. It's so odd, my bubble tip moved to an area right in front of a powerhead...mine must like flow!
@@lpasse Yes, they love flow, but not so much as in from of a powerhead. They tend not to bubble up under high flow. Let's see if it can stay put for a long period of time.
What a beautiful mixed reef. I'm really scared to take the plunge into corals. They seem like they're so hard to take care of. I have a 125 gallon I just set up this past month. Should I wait until the Nitrogen Cycle is complete before jumping into corals?
Thank you so much! Yes, you shall definitely wait for the nitrogen cycle to complete (3-6 months) before you introduce corals to the tank. While you are waiting, you may have your clean up crew in place and start to cultivate algae in the reactor.
Amazing tank!!
Thank you 🙏
you da man, Roger! great video, thanks
My pleasure. And thank you too, gold3n!
Those blue leathers & that blue anemone 🔥
😄
Nice video editing and camera shots.
Thank you! I'll try iPhone 12 Pro for the next episode.
@@zzyz keep it up! You are doing great 👍
Will try my best! 🙏
This is stunning
For sure one of the best mixed reef tanks I've ever seen. I'm thinking of setting up a Red Sea Peninsula 500, would you mind listing the equipment you're using? It would help me a lot. Thank you!
Thank you! Peninsula looks gorgeous! You will be proud of it. I talked about hardware, circulation and filtration in my last episode. I'll continue to discuss flow, lighting and useful gadgets in future updates. For your information, other than the equipment already included in Peninsula, you still need the following:
- Chiller with pump
- Skimmer with pump
- Algae reactor with pump
- Bio rings
- Return pump
- Wave makers
- Lights
- Filter floss
- Active carbon
@@zzyz
Thank you! 😊
@@avelinofernandes6359 My pleasure!
Awesome tank! What lights are you using??
Thank you! I use Red Sea LED 90.
Woww 🤗😘😘 very beautiful tank 🤤🤤🤗😍😍😍😍
Do you have a setup spec anywhere and your dosing habits for this tank, I’m really interested for your spin on things
Great video, thank you!
Glad you liked it. Thank you too!
Beautiful tank subbed.
Thank you so much!
Wow... amazing reef
Thank you Steve.
What I’ve learned it really is more of a biological process that allows this sense of harmony