2 clowns ,1 sarg Magr damsel,2 engineer goby , 1lawnmower blenny , 2inch bass , in a 55
Andrew calvo
Andrew calvo
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I haven’t started stocking yet (90 gallon) but I’m thinking…
1 Yellow Tang
1 Sailfin Tang
1 Hippo Tang
4 Green Chromis
4 Anthias
1 Goby
2 Clowns
And possibly 1 Powder Blue Tang
…any thoughts?
Thanks for the input!Sailfin, hippo, and powder blue get much to big for a 90. Yellow will be okay. And in my experience the chromis will fight and eventually kill each other. I've tried multipul times. If you take out 3 chromis, pb tang, hippo, and sailfin you have a better stock, besides 4 tangs in a 90 will make them aggressive towards each other
Sailfin, hippo, and powder blue get much to big for a 90. Yellow will be okay. And in my experience the chromis will fight and eventually kill each other. I've tried multipul times. If you take out 3 chromis, pb tang, hippo, and sailfin you have a better stock, besides 4 tangs in a 90 will make them aggressive towards each other
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Does anyone consider they're display tank and sump in gallons or just display tank on fish load?
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When a single fish can be an inch or twenty inches, fish per gallon is not consistent enough to be a very useful stat depending on what you want to use it for.
"How many inches of adult fish per gallon?" would be a little better question, and gives a much different picture for most every tank presented. (If the idea is to use this info to avoid over-stocking your tank, use this measure and not simple inch/gal.)
I've got three adult Barnacle Blennies in a 40 gallon, FWIW. 3" total of adult fish in 40 gallons.
Just for reference, my old freshwater Oscar tank was two fish in a 75 gallon, or about 26" of adult fish.
-Matt
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