When to add a clean up crew

reefcleaners

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We are often asked, "when is the best time to add a cleanup crew to my aquarium?". It is in our opinion, that the best time to add a cleanup crew to your aquarium is after the tank has cycled, and the tank has begun showing algae. Both conditions should be met before adding a cleanup crew to your tank. Usually a tank is finished cycling by the time algae begins to form in the aquarium but that is not always the case.



Diatoms, a brown powdery algae like life form, are usually the first to show up in a new aquarium. When they begin to appear, you will be ready for a starting crew for your aquarium. Snails that are good at removing diatoms include ceriths and nerites, both of which are hardy. At this stage, it is usually uncommon to have more complex algae and your tank such as hair algae, bubble algae or turf algae so cleaners that specialize in those areas such as hermits, turbo snails, or urchins should be avoided in a starting cleanup crew. However, sometimes live rock added to the aquarium will have different kinds of algae that may have to be taken care of, and those cleaners can fill a role in those cases.



Scavengers can also be added with your starting crew if you plan to have fish or coral soon that you will be feeding. Scavengers can be fed sinking pellet food to tide them over if the tank is not receiving enough regular feeding to sustain them.


Certain cleaners, such as chitons, limpets, and urchins should be avoided in starting crews because they have less tolerance to poor or unstable water conditions relative to other cleaners that can equally do the job in a young tank.


A cleanup crew can be added in stages, or all at a time (assuming the limitations discussed in this article are followed), without a major impact to the bio load of the tank. This is because of the slow metabolism and low oxygen consumption of algae eating invertebrates used in standard cleanup crews when compared to more active fish.


Find out more at Reef Cleaners| Clean up Crews and Macroalgae - Reef Cleaners, we have a list of articles designed for the hobbyist just starting out or as a refresher for those who have been around awhile.



All Articles - Reef Cleaners
 

revhtree

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We are often asked, "when is the best time to add a cleanup crew to my aquarium?". It is in our opinion, that the best time to add a cleanup crew to your aquarium is after the tank has cycled, and the tank has begun showing algae. Both conditions should be met before adding a cleanup crew to your tank. Usually a tank is finished cycling by the time algae begins to form in the aquarium but that is not always the case.



Diatoms, a brown powdery algae like life form, are usually the first to show up in a new aquarium. When they begin to appear, you will be ready for a starting crew for your aquarium. Snails that are good at removing diatoms include ceriths and nerites, both of which are hardy. At this stage, it is usually uncommon to have more complex algae and your tank such as hair algae, bubble algae or turf algae so cleaners that specialize in those areas such as hermits, turbo snails, or urchins should be avoided in a starting cleanup crew. However, sometimes live rock added to the aquarium will have different kinds of algae that may have to be taken care of, and those cleaners can fill a role in those cases.



Scavengers can also be added with your starting crew if you plan to have fish or coral soon that you will be feeding. Scavengers can be fed sinking pellet food to tide them over if the tank is not receiving enough regular feeding to sustain them.


Certain cleaners, such as chitons, limpets, and urchins should be avoided in starting crews because they have less tolerance to poor or unstable water conditions relative to other cleaners that can equally do the job in a young tank.


A cleanup crew can be added in stages, or all at a time (assuming the limitations discussed in this article are followed), without a major impact to the bio load of the tank. This is because of the slow metabolism and low oxygen consumption of algae eating invertebrates used in standard cleanup crews when compared to more active fish.


Find out more at Reef Cleaners| Clean up Crews and Macroalgae - Reef Cleaners, we have a list of articles designed for the hobbyist just starting out or as a refresher for those who have been around awhile.



All Articles - Reef Cleaners
I am currently cycling a 45g tank and on your website the suggested cuc consisted of about 80 varying snails and 10 hermits. Is this based on an established tank? I feel like 80 snails is a bit much for my sized tank. I don't know if I will have enough alge to sustain them.
 

tehachappi32

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I don't think anything will eat the diatom.... but diatom just disappear as your tank matures I think. I added a fish before the cut simply because there was nothing to clean up when the tank is new :-)
 
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reefcleaners

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Ceriths and nerites will eat diatoms. Chitons, Trochus snails, cowries as well, nearly everything in the ocean is eaten by something. When it seems nothing will, the thing that does is probably a Rudderfish. If I can shrink those guys down and get them to give up on their nomadic behavior I will have a cleaner for every issue. :)
 
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reefcleaners

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I am currently cycling a 45g tank and on your website the suggested cuc consisted of about 80 varying snails and 10 hermits. Is this based on an established tank? I feel like 80 snails is a bit much for my sized tank. I don't know if I will have enough alge to sustain them.

You can add less if you prefer. Dwarf ceriths are tiny, they make the crew seem larger on paper than it is in real life. If you prefer less animals you can go with larger ones instead in their place but larger cleaners tend to block more view than a lot of smaller ones.
 

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