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Joined 16 yr. Posted January 12, 2022. I've got one in a 10 gallon with Clownfish. He's very active swims the entire tank all day long and swims in and out of corals and the base of the rock. The only quark is that he likes to dig the sand around the rocks to find more crevaces to swim around and I think he sleeps down there.
What fish can i get for my 10 gallon (reef safe) its almost done cycling. i have 3 mexican hermit crabs and 3 snails. i will most likely be getting a cleaner shrimp. with that what fish can i add i really want some kind of blenny or goby. All and any recamendations welcome.Thanks in advance.
There are a few options. You want to stick with smaller fish. I would suggest sticking with 1 fish. Oc. Clown. Clown gobies (you could do 2) Purple firefish. Watchman goby. I have a royal dottyback in my 10g. The fish doesn't grow any bigger than clowns but its aggressive and a swimmer so its alone.
feasibly you can put those 3 fish in a tank together. Make sure you have a lid, as the fire fish is a jumper. IMO 10 gallons is too small for most Anemones, but people do it. You will be limited to your choice and number of corals if you were planning on adding any, as the anemone will take up a lot of real estate.
SaltwaterShoup. 36. Chicago. Joined 8 yr. Posted May 18, 2016. A good rule of thumb is to add 1" to 1.5" of sand per gallon of tank space. You want the sand to be deep enough to cover the bottom (obviously) but you don't want too much or the sand is impossible to keep clean.
Reef Reece. I have a Fluval Evo 13.5g and had a Koralia 240, found it to be pretty naff as it was a bit hard to angle it where you wanted. This spurred me to buy a Jebao SW-2 ( May be listed as Jecod, its the same company and exact same item ) and what a perfect little Wavemaker. Its DC so you can control the speed and flow, creates lovely ...
Kensington, MD. Joined 14 yr. Posted February 2, 2022. Two clowns is pretty high bioload in a 10G, especially when they are grown. While a PJ cardinal doesn't need a ton of swimming space (they tend to sort of hover) they can get to 4 inches long - a fair bit bigger than a banggai, so I still wouldn't keep one in a 20G.
Note: All these items are suggestions and thoughts, nor are final. This entire setup is intended to be under $350 or under, and would like to keep that with any setup. Equipment. -Tank and Filter: Grreat Choice 10 Gallon Aquarium Kit. -Light: Orbit Marine Led 18". -Heater: Eheim Jager (75 watts)
michelleshusband. 167. Joined 13 yr. Posted March 14, 2012. i had 1 clown, fire goby, yellowtail damsel, chromis, and one other fish in my 10 gallon. yellow tail was a little aggressive toward others but they got along fine. also had 2 shrimps.
Live rock and waterchanges. Hows that for cheap. IMO: For a 10 gallon nano-reef I think thats not only the cheapest way of "filtering" but also the BEST way of filtering. (maybe a skimmer and refugium would be a plus, but not necessary)