Ack! Not that photo again. Are you thinking you have an isopod? Knock on wood I've never run across one in my tank.
RO unit (I have 2, but never hooked them up)quote
I heard that you needed some extra storage room in your home. I'm happy to take those units off your hands to help you out. Won't even charge you. Shoot, maybe I'll pay for shipping. I'm just like that. Generous.:grinno:
Ack! Not that photo again. Are you thinking you have an isopod? Knock on wood I've never run across one in my tank.
RO unit (I have 2, but never hooked them up)quote
I heard that you needed some extra storage room in your home. I'm happy to take those units off your hands to help you out. Won't even charge you. Shoot, maybe I'll pay for shipping. I'm just like that. Generous.:grinno:
I'm sure you would! I don't know why he doesn't hook one of them up. I would hate to have to go and get the amount of water that we go threw. Just today we went threw 11gal. I would say in a week we go threw 9gal with no water changes in any of the four tanks. we haven't really done water changes on all the tank in the same week but if we did it would be around about 34 gals with top off for that week. Between the gas to get it, the work to move it, and the cost of buying it an RO/DI is so worth it.
Wood, they are filter feeders, I'd definitely use micro sized filter food for them. Not sure how you are target feeding by the way but you want to let the food go slightly under their crown so that it can filter up through their feathers.
I have been squirting a little bit of zooplankton and a few morsels of Cyclop-eeze into the Coco worm's tube every other day.
<<I would not do this as these foods are mostly too large (requires very small/microscopic fare) and the action is only stressing the worm more.>>