Five steps to success with Saltwater Coral Reef Aquariums
Do you dream of watching the natural beauty of the undersea reef
life while sitting in your living room?
Whether your goal is a nano reef tank or a 150 gallon aquarium
with an ecosystem of coral and saltwater fish, the following
five steps will lead you on your way to success.
1) Commit! Decide you are going to spend the $$ it takes to make
a proper go of it. At a minimum, most tanks, (from 10 gal to 55
gal) take between $250 and $500 to get going. Can you do it
cheaper? Yes, but usually not your first one. You have to know
what you are doing and understand how things can and will go
wrong before you can choose less expensive husbandry options
and/or equipment. Save up if you have to, but count on that
first tank being expensive.
Realize that this is not a short term commitment. And as much
fun as it is to collect the coolest coral fragments out there
and show them off to your friends, there WILL come a time when
you are hauling all of those same 'frags' out of the tank and
into temporary storage when your six year old cracks the side of
the display tank with a pool ball or some other calamity occurs.
2) Study! Spend time on the internet, in books and watching
nature shows on reefs BEFORE you get your animals. Understand
the animals that you are going to keep and how they interact
with each other. If you count on the LFS (Local Fish Store) or
your buddy down the road to keep you out of trouble and don't do
your homework.. You will fail. That is the one guarantee in this
hobby. DO YOUR HOMEWORK.
The only way around this is to be able to afford to pay someone
else to set-up and maintain your tank.
3) Mingle! (see 2 above) There are plenty of reef-keeping
societies out there with lots of experience to help you along
your way and teach you what you need to know. As long as you are
doing your own homework, they are usually happy to help!
4) Keep an open mind! There is not just one way to keep a reef
tank - no matter how loudly people on the various bulletin
boards and forums out there might shout that there is. 5) Share!
It is amazing how much help people are willing to give when they
realize that you are offering a particularly nice specimen that
they have always wanted. Equipment that they didn't even
remember they had may magically appear or they might be willing
to share a very nice piece of their own reef frag with you.
Trading frags not only is a great way to increase your variety,
but it helps maintain genetic strains of corals (frags are also
known as 'clones') that might otherwise die out in a single tank
struck by the calamity mentioned in 1 above.