Thanks for the "advice"...Dave. I've raised each of my tangs since they were quarter size. They all get along great. And yes, just like ANY fish that grows too large for their tank, some action needs to be taken. But by your advice, hardly anyone would own a tang because how many people out there could afford the proportions you're talking about. Not very practical, feasible, or realistic "advice".This is a very nice looking tank. However, you also have three tangs in there. A RSM S250 only holds about 66 gal of water. Each of those tangs has a minimum tank size requirement of about 100 to 180 gal. Now I'm not trying to play "tang police" on you or beat up on you on your first post, but long term this arrangement is headed for a lot of trouble. Tangs grow quickly and they will not have anywhere near enough "running room". If your going to keep a tang successfully, your best course of action would be to trade in, sell, or give away at least two of the tangs, and plan an upgrade to a larger tank to accommodate the one remaining. The other possible way would be to get a really large tank to handle all the tangs, but this would mean about a 250 - 300 gal tank as a minimum, and this would be a very expensive alternative.
Thanks for the "advice"...Dave. I've raised each of my tangs since they were quarter size. They all get along great. And yes, just like ANY fish that grows too large for their tank, some action needs to be taken. But by your advice, hardly anyone would own a tang because how many people out there could afford the proportions you're talking about. Not very practical, feasible, or realistic "advice".
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