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It’s a 70 though. It should be fine in there for awhile.Actually on the topic of "it is doable" in smaller tanks, no. It actually isn't. The reason is that you now have to catch the fish to move to another tank. This may:
1. Stress other fish in the system
2. Break corals and/or stress them
3. Force hobbyist to remove corals, rocks, remove water, to capture fish
Of course maybe you will get lucky and a trap so you don't have to run through 1 - 3 above. But at the end of the day one has to ask this. Why add a fish only to remove 5 to 9 months later?
It’s a 70 though. It should be fine in there for awhile.
Go ahead and push your opinions! That's what the Internet was created for! ;HappyI read the first post - said 57 I thought. In any case all good - not going to push my opinions on the person
Go ahead and push your opinions! That's what the Internet was created for! ;Happy
My bad. I thought it was a 70. Day 21 of isolation. I’m starting to lose it ;DeadI read the first post - said 57 I thought. In any case all good - not going to push my opinions on the person
Here’s my question. Can I put a Tomini Tang or another one of the smaller Kole Tangs in a 4 foot, 100+ gallon tank and it will live happily for its full life even after it reaches its adult size of 6”-7”? Or would that even be too small and suffocating for one of these tangs?
Here’s my question. Can I put a Tomini Tang or another one of the smaller Kole Tangs in a 4 foot, 100+ gallon tank and it will live happily for its full life even after it reaches its adult size of 6”-7”? Or would that even be too small and suffocating for one of these tangs?
If you read thru the the thread the consensus was that the Atlantic Ocean is too small for a tang that’s why they live in the pacific. So therefore your Olympic swimming pool size reef tank is not big enough!!!