This thread is purely information, based on experience. I'm not looking for advice but looking to share my screw ups so others don't do the same 
We often see recommended tank sizes for fish, but where do you stop filling your tank up. Is it after 2 fish, 4 fish or 10 fish etc.
The best place to start is at the beginning.
Everyone who is new to the hobby is told to cycle their tank, this is to prepare your tank for any future bioload by getting the nitrogen cycle up and running.
Everyone is told to add fish SLOWLY to a newly cycled tank, but how many of us can truthfully hold their hands up and say we waited
After every new addition, it's always advisable to test your water parameters. This will tell you how your tank is handling it's new additions and the bioload they naturally produce.
I've been there - got a tank up and running added a fish, and another, and another, etc and always wondered why I had high nitrate levels.
Then I upgraded to a larger tank (182gals) and all of a sudden zero nitrate. The first time in my 4years of marine keeping.
My stock:
8 chromis
1 cleaner wrasse
1 maroon clown
1 yellow tang
1 lawnmower blenny
1 lamarks angel
1 spotted mandarin dragonette
Not that many fish for such a big tank, I thought, so I did my research and found the perfect centrepiece as my last fish................
a pinktail trigger
Not a problem, 75 gal is the general minimum tank size, I can fit him in.
Then a few weeks later I tested my nitrates, result shows 50:swear: what a lovely shade of dark pink the test tube goes, shame it's supposed to be clear.
Let's look at the inhabitants again and see why:
Chromis - small poopers
Cleaner wrasse - small pooper
maroon clown - small/medium pooper
yellow tang - big pooper
lawnmower blenny - big pooper (for such a small fish they do big poops frequently
lamarks angel - small/medium pooper
spotted mandarin dragonette - tiny pooper
pinktail trigger - absolutely gigantic pooper!
That's a lot of poop!
I am now constantly battling with high nitrates and am starting to beat it, but it's been a slow process. So when you hear us go on about overstocking and cycling your tank properly - we've all been there!!!!
HTH

We often see recommended tank sizes for fish, but where do you stop filling your tank up. Is it after 2 fish, 4 fish or 10 fish etc.
The best place to start is at the beginning.
Everyone who is new to the hobby is told to cycle their tank, this is to prepare your tank for any future bioload by getting the nitrogen cycle up and running.
Everyone is told to add fish SLOWLY to a newly cycled tank, but how many of us can truthfully hold their hands up and say we waited

After every new addition, it's always advisable to test your water parameters. This will tell you how your tank is handling it's new additions and the bioload they naturally produce.
I've been there - got a tank up and running added a fish, and another, and another, etc and always wondered why I had high nitrate levels.
Then I upgraded to a larger tank (182gals) and all of a sudden zero nitrate. The first time in my 4years of marine keeping.
My stock:
8 chromis
1 cleaner wrasse
1 maroon clown
1 yellow tang
1 lawnmower blenny
1 lamarks angel
1 spotted mandarin dragonette
Not that many fish for such a big tank, I thought, so I did my research and found the perfect centrepiece as my last fish................
a pinktail trigger
Not a problem, 75 gal is the general minimum tank size, I can fit him in.
Then a few weeks later I tested my nitrates, result shows 50:swear: what a lovely shade of dark pink the test tube goes, shame it's supposed to be clear.
Let's look at the inhabitants again and see why:
Chromis - small poopers
Cleaner wrasse - small pooper
maroon clown - small/medium pooper
yellow tang - big pooper
lawnmower blenny - big pooper (for such a small fish they do big poops frequently

lamarks angel - small/medium pooper
spotted mandarin dragonette - tiny pooper
pinktail trigger - absolutely gigantic pooper!
That's a lot of poop!
I am now constantly battling with high nitrates and am starting to beat it, but it's been a slow process. So when you hear us go on about overstocking and cycling your tank properly - we've all been there!!!!
HTH
