Rank Info

Ranked #326 out of 2372 corals & inverts pictures worldwide
This picture looks better than 86.26% of pictures in this category
10 1
The Average Score for this picture is: 5.74
This picture has been rated : 23 times.
The Average Score for this category is: 5.11

More Info

State: Mississippi
Country: United States
Description: tank is 40 gallon breeder (45 gallons) custom stand, fluval canister filter, red sea hang on protien skimmer, koralia wave maker, 150 watt heater, current t5 quad bulb fixture, bulbs; 460nm, 12k, 420nm, actinic white,
Advice: patience is key, and money, that helps also!
Fish Kept: Blue/Green Reef Chromis, Tomato Clownfish, Coral Beauty Angelfish, Royal Gramma Basslet
Corals/Plants: soft: hot pink ricordea yuma, green flourecent mushrooms, lavender mushrooms, muticolored mushrooms, colt coral, lots of green star polyps, xenia, clove polyps, several diferent colonies of zoanthids, protopalythoa, lps: two colonies of duncans (several heads on each), pearl bubble, branching hammer, torch, pagoda, frogspawn, green lobed brain, multicolored lobophylia non-photosynthetic: dendrophylia aka: large polyp sun coral inverts: cleaner shrimp, peppermint shrimp, about fifty astrea turbo snails (very small, theyre always breeding and my shrimps help keep the population down), six nessarius snails,
Tank Size: 45 gallons

COMMENTS

There are no comments on this photo yet.

MOST RECENT ARTICLES

Overstocking Myths vs Reality
OVERSTOCKING MYTHS VS REALITY
Setting up a new aquarium is an exercise in restraint that many hobbyists, both beginners and seasoned veterans, find difficult to master.
Blackwater & Biotope Aquariums (Natural-Style Boom)
BLACKWATER & BIOTOPE AQUARIUMS (NATURAL-STYLE BOOM)
For decades, the gold standard of the home aquarium was a pristine, crystal-clear box of water, often decorated with neon gravel and plastic plants that bore little resemblance to the wild.
Sustainable & Ethical Fishkeeping
SUSTAINABLE & ETHICAL FISHKEEPING
Bringing a slice of the underwater world into your home is a rewarding experience, but as the hobby grows, so does our responsibility to ensure that our passion doesn’t come at the expense of the environments we admire.

READ AQUARIUM ARTICLES