Quote:
|
Originally Posted by fidojoe That's my concern as well, the coral beauty might come out if theres any problems, leaving the smaller fish there. Just a thought...I was reading on nanoreef and it seems like a lot of people have 4+ fish in their 20's (clowns and gobies from what I've seen). Any thoughts on this? Is this a space issue or a water quality issue?
. |
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by cheeks69 IMO it's both, with such a small volume of water alot can go wrong quickly. My Potter's angel eats and poop's all day, so the Dwarf would be a big bio-load for your tank. |
Yeah, I definataly agree with cheeks. with my 20 gal, I noticed a Huge difference in water qualitly going from 3 fish to 4 fish. Enough that I moved the 4th fish to a different tank. While people do have good sucess with more fish in a smaller tank, it is ussually achived by doing more frequent and larger water changes, and by feeding sparser.
I also think that the wrasse would be far more interesting if it did not have the angel for compitition/ vise-versa. It seems like they would try and stake out the same territory and you'd have two fish hiding in rocks, instead of one fish out in the open more often.
Have fun setting up the tank! and let us know how that coralife light works. Coralife has such cool packaging it just makes me want to buy all thier stuff, even though it's ussually not the best deal!

but I like how that light clamps on the tank.