Hey everyone!
So, I just did a little bit of rearranging of my tank, mostly with the getting the sand to look more natural and not so 'flat, and noticed that I actually do have a few pockets of food, mostly brine, collecting where the flow of my tank must eventually deposit it. It is nothing really bad or not a big amount by any means, but it is in a place where it would be hard to get at with my python and/or little scooper tool I have.
What I am wondering is, for a reef tank, what would be a good, helpful type fish or invert that could possible take care of this for me? Most, well all, of my fish are more mid to top dwellers and I have yet to see any of them go after food on the substrate, other than the seaweed/algea that I just sink to the bottom of the tank with a clip.
The fish I have are:
2 Green Chromis
1 Bicolored Angel
1 Six-line Wrasse
1 Flame Angel
1 Fire (blood) Shrimp
2 Turbo snails
4 Trochus snails
1 Scarlet Reef Hermit
I do not have any hermits, other than one right now because they bunch that I bought when I first started out were pretty big and from what I understand, could pose a threat to the shrimp and the snails at the size they were. My plans are, on friday due to travel issues and the holidays, to pick up 25 small hermits of what I assume are a genaric type (not scarlet reef or blue legged) but are small. I couldnt get them earlier because of an intake 'strainer' for my powerheads that had holes in it that were large enough to possibly suck a smaller hermit into the pump. I have since fixed this but the LFS that has enough of these hermits at the size I want is about 45 minutes to an hour away and I cannot make it there after work due to closing times. (I know this sounds like a bunch of excuses, but it is real)
So, anyways, I would like to find a bottom dwelling type fish so that I am not left with a whole pile of hermit crabs in this one spot once I do get them. Any recomendations for me on something that will fit into a very peaceful (hopefully, the angels are ok together, by the way), soon to be reef tank?
So, I just did a little bit of rearranging of my tank, mostly with the getting the sand to look more natural and not so 'flat, and noticed that I actually do have a few pockets of food, mostly brine, collecting where the flow of my tank must eventually deposit it. It is nothing really bad or not a big amount by any means, but it is in a place where it would be hard to get at with my python and/or little scooper tool I have.
What I am wondering is, for a reef tank, what would be a good, helpful type fish or invert that could possible take care of this for me? Most, well all, of my fish are more mid to top dwellers and I have yet to see any of them go after food on the substrate, other than the seaweed/algea that I just sink to the bottom of the tank with a clip.
The fish I have are:
2 Green Chromis
1 Bicolored Angel
1 Six-line Wrasse
1 Flame Angel
1 Fire (blood) Shrimp
2 Turbo snails
4 Trochus snails
1 Scarlet Reef Hermit
I do not have any hermits, other than one right now because they bunch that I bought when I first started out were pretty big and from what I understand, could pose a threat to the shrimp and the snails at the size they were. My plans are, on friday due to travel issues and the holidays, to pick up 25 small hermits of what I assume are a genaric type (not scarlet reef or blue legged) but are small. I couldnt get them earlier because of an intake 'strainer' for my powerheads that had holes in it that were large enough to possibly suck a smaller hermit into the pump. I have since fixed this but the LFS that has enough of these hermits at the size I want is about 45 minutes to an hour away and I cannot make it there after work due to closing times. (I know this sounds like a bunch of excuses, but it is real)
So, anyways, I would like to find a bottom dwelling type fish so that I am not left with a whole pile of hermit crabs in this one spot once I do get them. Any recomendations for me on something that will fit into a very peaceful (hopefully, the angels are ok together, by the way), soon to be reef tank?