Well, I've got this 10 gallon marine coldwater (temperate) aquarium "rockbottom experiment" in the running. I've mentioned it in other places, but will settle to this one thread to pursue its developments.
Original Set-Up: I set up the tank on Day 1 with 10 gallons of Puget Sound saltwater, a bottom filter, and basic 5-15 gallon side filter. Upon set-up I placed the following things, collected at low tide:
The barnacles, one rock crab and the various hitchhikers survived. An ample population developing of mini-amphipods that have set up camp mainly in the side filter. A particular very very small sea anemone secured itself to the face of the tank, about 1/3 down from the top, and has actually tripled in size, from 1.5 mm height to 4.5 mm. "Everyone else is dead Dave, the'yre all dead, Dave!" (name that quote anyone?)
The jellies didn't last the first night, disappearing into "filterland". The stickleback, as predicted, passed on after 3 days. Within the first week every crab but one had made its pilgrimage up the filter tubes and out into the great beyond, meeting their maker and moving on to the great rock pool in the sky.
It's been four weeks this last weekend since Set-Up Day.
Saturday, July 16: Decided the tank had been running long enough to set up some form of stability, so took a trip to the water and brought home, introduced:
From this point on I'll keep the running log, including undesirable developments, questions, etc. in separate posts here.
Original Set-Up: I set up the tank on Day 1 with 10 gallons of Puget Sound saltwater, a bottom filter, and basic 5-15 gallon side filter. Upon set-up I placed the following things, collected at low tide:
1 rock with barnacles, etc.
8 small rock crabs
2 limpets
1 cluster of mussels
1 stickleback fish
2 small non-specific jellyfishes
Hitchhikers: several non-specific mini-sea anemones and amphipods
I knew from the getgo the likely casualties would include the mussels (lack of feeding ability for high-demand filter feeders), the stickleback (for lack of serious current), and the jellies (because "them dudes" just aren't meant for anything but a very specialized tank system).8 small rock crabs
2 limpets
1 cluster of mussels
1 stickleback fish
2 small non-specific jellyfishes
Hitchhikers: several non-specific mini-sea anemones and amphipods
The barnacles, one rock crab and the various hitchhikers survived. An ample population developing of mini-amphipods that have set up camp mainly in the side filter. A particular very very small sea anemone secured itself to the face of the tank, about 1/3 down from the top, and has actually tripled in size, from 1.5 mm height to 4.5 mm. "Everyone else is dead Dave, the'yre all dead, Dave!" (name that quote anyone?)
The jellies didn't last the first night, disappearing into "filterland". The stickleback, as predicted, passed on after 3 days. Within the first week every crab but one had made its pilgrimage up the filter tubes and out into the great beyond, meeting their maker and moving on to the great rock pool in the sky.
It's been four weeks this last weekend since Set-Up Day.
Saturday, July 16: Decided the tank had been running long enough to set up some form of stability, so took a trip to the water and brought home, introduced:
6 small (1.5 cm long) sticklebacks
1 large (3 inch long) stickle back
2 mussel clusters: Eqwuivalent of a "Live Rock Introduction" (mostly empty shells because didn't want more mussel-casualties) containing several small, intriguing sea anemones, a clump of red-brown seaweed, a clump of green cellophane-like seaweed, and a dozen or more "sea lice" and other potential hitchhikers.
1 large (3 inch long) stickle back
2 mussel clusters: Eqwuivalent of a "Live Rock Introduction" (mostly empty shells because didn't want more mussel-casualties) containing several small, intriguing sea anemones, a clump of red-brown seaweed, a clump of green cellophane-like seaweed, and a dozen or more "sea lice" and other potential hitchhikers.
From this point on I'll keep the running log, including undesirable developments, questions, etc. in separate posts here.