I have a royal Gramma that got ick the day we bought it, I just made sure it got food and it recovered just fine. I did some research and some people said if the fish is healthy it can recover from ick on its own, and that’s exactly what my fish did
The fun part about this organisms is that most cyanobacteria has the capacity to do "fixation". That is: it can interact with atmospheric N2 (triple bonded) gas that has dissolved into your tank's solution; and convert it to an available form a nitrogen (usually an ionic ammonia). It's where the global nitrogen cycle starts. And bacteria are the only organisms on the planet able to do it. Most aquatic species that fix nitrogen are free-living like cyanobacteria's; while most terrestrial species are soil borne microbes, many of which form symbiotic relationships with plants (rhizobium with Legume's or azsopirillim with some grasses for example). The balance you describe about maintaining nitrogen is important because of this fixation. When you drop too low, other competitors start to die back. And that window of opportunity is what allows cyano to explode in growth, because it's not rate limited to the ammonia and nitrate in your water. It literally makes it's own.
Cyano ! Finally, one mistake I have not made yet ! 👍 If you know which antibiotics are for Gram - , Gram +, … etc., you are a step ahead of some of the medical students and interns I’ve worked with. 😄 As for fungal infections, many are opportunistic. When the opportunity that allowed them to catch hold is gone, so is the infection. So with fungal infections, look for a condition that made it possible. These are often easily connected. Thanks for the concise ( yes I said concise) discussion of a big topic, Jim
Mine dosent either. I’ve always heard six lines were aggressive but I’ve had mine for and he minds his business. I’ve even added other fish years after. He still dosent bother anyone.
@@erikgriffin1107 Once they get to a certain age their hormone changes make them extremely territorial. Once it has reached that point if you add any new peaceful type fish, the six line will attack it to no end. So let’s say one of your fish passes away of old age or whatever, well when you go to the replace that fish the six line will treat it as an intruder and you will have to remove the six line or the new fish you added.
Where is Matthew? I havent seen him on a video in a long long time. Ive flirted with this hobby for over a decade but really appreciate his beginners content. Always a good refresher! Hope hes ok and coming back to YT soon!!
He’s at Hello Reef. It’s an all in one, nano tank clownfish system and a “walk you through” series on how to set it up and maintain it. I have one and love it. You can follow his beginner series here..he’s great.
I find it amazing that people can have zero nitrates and I'm over here fighting too many nitrates. That's probably the difference between having a drilled tank with a dedicated sump and using a regular fish tank with a canister filter.
Me too, my 36 gallons reef tank is running since day one with canister filter, and I have softies, torches and hammers, so the myth that you can't have a marine aquarium without a sump is totally false.
I will say I’m a culprit of mistake #3 of cyno bacteria. It’s a b**** to get rid of in the tank. And I’m a maintenance freak. I do daily dosing and test twice a week. But now I just keep roughly about .08 phosphates and noticed that keep a little nitrate within spec on lower end have kept it away. Another thing to remember as a beginner is “DO NOT CHASE NUMBERS” as long as it’s near it you’re good. ❤
Once I added a powder blue tang… game over. Anyone else that tries to go in will be tail whipped, bit, and circled all day, all night. Glad my tank was already fully stocked. Most aggressive fish I had was a beautiful purple dottyback who was the hardest fish in my life to catch. Had to buy a trap and bait him
If you put in 8 Chromis into less than 180 gallons, eventually you will have 1 Chromis. It’s the same thing with Peppermint Shrimp. If you buy 6 Peppermint shrimp you will eventually end up with one Peppermint shrimp. Best to just buy one in small aquaria.
That's Not true, I have 6 chromis in my 36 gallons reef tank since day one, and after 8 months they still together swimming around, all depends the stability of ur ecosystem, oooh I forgot to mention it is running with a canister filter so u need to learn a lot about this hobby!!! 😎👍🐟
My Chromis are the most peaceful fish in my tank. I bought a Six Line Wrasse, but I think now he will go to my sump where I have lots of live rock. I also have other non-aggressive Wrasses and want to protect them. When I start up another tank with bigger aggressive fish, I'll just move him over.
if i have ich, or the other illnesses kill all my fish, i have to wait 3 to 4 months. but in those four months, can i add corals or anemones to my tank?
Hello and thankyou for this video. What is your opinion on cyano in a nano skimmerless tank. Do you think a HOB skimmer would help me in a sumpless tank? Also with respect to 0 nitrates and 0 phos. How do I increase them?
Skimmers are absolutely a useful filtration tool. That said, adding a skimmer is unlikely to solve your cyanobacteria problem. Manual removal combined with either out competing it or using something like chemiclean is usually the best solution.
I’m having a cyano issue in my 120. My nutrients are at .05 PO4 and 20 NO3. They’ve been at these levels for 2 years at least. I’ve tried to get the NO3 down but it just likes it there. I have strong flow with 2x Nero 5s and 2x Nero 3s running 60% -85%. The one thing that changed is that I have been slowly ramping up my 3 kessel 360s over the last 4 or 5 months. I’m 99% sure this is the cause of MY cyano issue. So I’ve been slowly ramping back down the lights and manually removing the cyano during water changes. It’s not getting any worse but not any better yet. I figure I should see improvement in the next 4 or 5 months. I’m also planning to add some beneficial bacteria to out compete the pesky red stuff. 🤞🏼
Have a feeling your flow isn't getting down low. Back off a bit on your feedings. And do a half dose of ChemiClean while running a large air stone. Follow the water change directions. Will buy you some time for your nutrients to balance out.
Advice overall, but I don’t think that ick needs to be in the same sentence with velvet and brook. Many including myself has successfully combated ick many times over. Just feed them well and let their immunity catch up. Bonus if you can reduce the bio load with a UV
Can a yellow tang live in a 75 gallon tank or do they need to be moved to something bigger in 1 to 2 years? I can only have a 75 gallon in my house and its hard to understand what fish can stay in one.
75 gallons is going to be too small for a Yellow Tang's "forever home," but a small tang can certainly be kept in a 75 for a few years before needing an upgrade in swimming space.
I’ve had a purple tang in my 75 gallon for many years, I provided lots of swimming room, and lots of flow. The fish has been healthy and seems to be low stress.
In the shots in this video, that would be Brook. Clownfish are usually some of the more susceptible fish, which makes sense since they often call Brook "clownfish disease."
I have a 260g system. I was running a dual reator with carbon and GFO. I have been performing 50g (25x twice a week) water changes. My nitrates are at 15 and my phosphates are at 0. I have been fighting cyano for several months. I took the dual reactor off-line last week and started up a refugium. I'm using two return pumps with a combined flow of 1200gph +/-. I am also running a pair of maxspect gyres set to 50%. I have good flow, but there are some areas that visually get more flow than others. Is there a product I can use to add phosphate while still working to reduce nitrates?
You can dose phosphates with something like Brightwell NeoPhos. This won't necessarily lower your nitrates, but it'll help you get things a little more balanced. Unless you're seeing specific issues caused by nitrates, 15 ppm isn't alarmingly high. Most reefers will shoot for somewhere between 1-10 ppm nitrate, so you're not too far off. Especially if you consider the margin of error of our hobby grade test kits. www.bulkreefsupply.com/neophos-balanced-phosphorus-supplement-brightwell-aquatics.html
If I have cyanos, how would I vacuum every single day? That would be a large water change every day if I dispose the water, or would i recycle the water?
Hi there! As someone with OCD and in the mental health field (I’m an MSW), using language such as “obsessive compulsive” to describe excessive cleaning is quite problematic. Many folks with OCD do not experience a fixation on cleanliness and continuing this stereotype can be invalidating and discouraging to those seeking treatment. I realize that this is not a mental health channel, but it is important to use language that doesn’t perpetuate stigma. Thanks for all the work you do to help me keep better tanks!
whats next...describing black people as having dark skin problematic? I was sure to go back and check...he never said OCD. Seems like you're not paying attention and listening to the voices in your head. Probably why you're OCD. I for one am done with bending over backwards for the mentally challenged.
Thank you for taking time to write this. I was unaware that my words were hurtful and problematic. I will work on eliminating that from my vocabulary. I totally understand as somebody who has also struggled with mental health. Please continue to call me out if I slip up.
Six lines seem to be so hit or miss on the bullying. Most are model citizens while there always seem to be the one or two bad apples that cause problems.
I have a royal Gramma that got ick the day we bought it, I just made sure it got food and it recovered just fine. I did some research and some people said if the fish is healthy it can recover from ick on its own, and that’s exactly what my fish did
I have told new reefer to follow you. I have gotten so much from them. Thank you
Cool thanks for the info.
Really enjoyed this video. Thanks for the information.
The fun part about this organisms is that most cyanobacteria has the capacity to do "fixation".
That is: it can interact with atmospheric N2 (triple bonded) gas that has dissolved into your tank's solution; and convert it to an available form a nitrogen (usually an ionic ammonia). It's where the global nitrogen cycle starts. And bacteria are the only organisms on the planet able to do it.
Most aquatic species that fix nitrogen are free-living like cyanobacteria's; while most terrestrial species are soil borne microbes, many of which form symbiotic relationships with plants (rhizobium with Legume's or azsopirillim with some grasses for example).
The balance you describe about maintaining nitrogen is important because of this fixation. When you drop too low, other competitors start to die back. And that window of opportunity is what allows cyano to explode in growth, because it's not rate limited to the ammonia and nitrate in your water. It literally makes it's own.
Cyano ! Finally, one mistake I have not made yet ! 👍
If you know which antibiotics are for Gram - , Gram +, … etc., you are a step ahead of some of the medical students and interns I’ve worked with. 😄
As for fungal infections, many are opportunistic. When the opportunity that allowed them to catch hold is gone, so is the infection. So with fungal infections, look for a condition that made it possible. These are often easily connected.
Thanks for the concise ( yes I said concise) discussion of a big topic,
Jim
Thanks for this video. I’m still in the learning stages of saltwater fish diseases. I’ve been reefing for a bout two years now.
Happy Friday ppl! Great video.
Top vid reefer see next time have good weekend 👍
Thank you for all your videos since then I feel more comfortable to and less stress more confident to invest
Watching this while acclimating my new six lined 😮😅
Good important tips on preventing disease and aggression from entering your tanks. Nice editing Matthew 😊
Hello, try a cheap double sided mirror. Works great for aggressive fish. Remove it out after a couple of days.
My 6 line has been great!
Great video Matt! 😀👍👍
I have had 3 six line wrasses and everyone has been a shy timed fish that didn't bother anything
Mine dosent either. I’ve always heard six lines were aggressive but I’ve had mine for and he minds his business. I’ve even added other fish years after. He still dosent bother anyone.
@@erikgriffin1107 Once they get to a certain age their hormone changes make them extremely territorial. Once it has reached that point if you add any new peaceful type fish, the six line will attack it to no end. So let’s say one of your fish passes away of old age or whatever, well when you go to the replace that fish the six line will treat it as an intruder and you will have to remove the six line or the new fish you added.
Where is Matthew? I havent seen him on a video in a long long time. Ive flirted with this hobby for over a decade but really appreciate his beginners content. Always a good refresher! Hope hes ok and coming back to YT soon!!
He’s at Hello Reef. It’s an all in one, nano tank clownfish system and a “walk you through” series on how to set it up and maintain it. I have one and love it. You can follow his beginner series here..he’s great.
I find it amazing that people can have zero nitrates and I'm over here fighting too many nitrates. That's probably the difference between having a drilled tank with a dedicated sump and using a regular fish tank with a canister filter.
I have a fluval canister filter and a HOB skimmer and I’m fine
Me too, my 36 gallons reef tank is running since day one with canister filter, and I have softies, torches and hammers, so the myth that you can't have a marine aquarium without a sump is totally false.
Cool video
Matthew, you sir are my absolute favorite BRS celebrity.
I will say I’m a culprit of mistake #3 of cyno bacteria. It’s a b**** to get rid of in the tank. And I’m a maintenance freak. I do daily dosing and test twice a week. But now I just keep roughly about .08 phosphates and noticed that keep a little nitrate within spec on lower end have kept it away. Another thing to remember as a beginner is “DO NOT CHASE NUMBERS” as long as it’s near it you’re good. ❤
Once I added a powder blue tang… game over. Anyone else that tries to go in will be tail whipped, bit, and circled all day, all night. Glad my tank was already fully stocked. Most aggressive fish I had was a beautiful purple dottyback who was the hardest fish in my life to catch. Had to buy a trap and bait him
I turn my skimmer off at nights with dr Tim’s waste away gel keeps my nutrients in check
If you put in 8 Chromis into less than 180 gallons, eventually you will have 1 Chromis.
It’s the same thing with Peppermint Shrimp. If you buy 6 Peppermint shrimp you will eventually end up with one Peppermint shrimp.
Best to just buy one in small aquaria.
That's Not true, I have 6 chromis in my 36 gallons reef tank since day one, and after 8 months they still together swimming around, all depends the stability of ur ecosystem, oooh I forgot to mention it is running with a canister filter so u need to learn a lot about this hobby!!! 😎👍🐟
Had 6 chromis for 2 years in my tank they all survived
My Chromis are the most peaceful fish in my tank. I bought a Six Line Wrasse, but I think now he will go to my sump where I have lots of live rock. I also have other non-aggressive Wrasses and want to protect them. When I start up another tank with bigger aggressive fish, I'll just move him over.
nice!
Dinos thrive in ULNS. Cyano likes high phosphate tanks.
if i have ich, or the other illnesses kill all my fish, i have to wait 3 to 4 months. but in those four months, can i add corals or anemones to my tank?
Ha I love the sixline as the devil. Mine never bothers anybody
I had a six line wrasse that was too peaceful, and got the runaround from a dotyback
Hello and thankyou for this video. What is your opinion on cyano in a nano skimmerless tank. Do you think a HOB skimmer would help me in a sumpless tank? Also with respect to 0 nitrates and 0 phos. How do I increase them?
Skimmers are absolutely a useful filtration tool. That said, adding a skimmer is unlikely to solve your cyanobacteria problem. Manual removal combined with either out competing it or using something like chemiclean is usually the best solution.
Will running a strong UV on recommended flow rate help to avoid ick and velvet ?
It will help, but not completely eliminate the disease. In other words, UV is one step in a larger prevention plan.
How long do you quarantine the new fish for?
Check out Matthew's QT videos. Episodes 32a and 32b should answer your QT questions :)
ua-cam.com/video/kp4LKz-HVvM/v-deo.html
My tank survived velvet using rally pro and kick ich. SH*T WORKS!
I purchased a yellow coris wrasse 24 hours ago and he spends most of the time under the sand.He is housed in a 32 gal tank. Is this normal?
I’m having a cyano issue in my 120. My nutrients are at .05 PO4 and 20 NO3. They’ve been at these levels for 2 years at least. I’ve tried to get the NO3 down but it just likes it there. I have strong flow with 2x Nero 5s and 2x Nero 3s running 60% -85%. The one thing that changed is that I have been slowly ramping up my 3 kessel 360s over the last 4 or 5 months. I’m 99% sure this is the cause of MY cyano issue. So I’ve been slowly ramping back down the lights and manually removing the cyano during water changes. It’s not getting any worse but not any better yet. I figure I should see improvement in the next 4 or 5 months. I’m also planning to add some beneficial bacteria to out compete the pesky red stuff. 🤞🏼
Have a feeling your flow isn't getting down low. Back off a bit on your feedings. And do a half dose of ChemiClean while running a large air stone. Follow the water change directions. Will buy you some time for your nutrients to balance out.
@@reviewit7974 I’ll drop my powerheads down the glass a little to see if that helps. I really don’t want to use chemiclean though.
Advice overall, but I don’t think that ick needs to be in the same sentence with velvet and brook. Many including myself has successfully combated ick many times over. Just feed them well and let their immunity catch up. Bonus if you can reduce the bio load with a UV
Can a yellow tang live in a 75 gallon tank or do they need to be moved to something bigger in 1 to 2 years? I can only have a 75 gallon in my house and its hard to understand what fish can stay in one.
75 gallons is going to be too small for a Yellow Tang's "forever home," but a small tang can certainly be kept in a 75 for a few years before needing an upgrade in swimming space.
I’ve had a purple tang in my 75 gallon for many years, I provided lots of swimming room, and lots of flow. The fish has been healthy and seems to be low stress.
FUN FACT... Bring your aggressive fish to your local fish store so they can resell it to the next person,,,,,, ahhhhh the circle of death
😬🤣
what is the disease that the ocellaris classic has? Velvet or brook?
In the shots in this video, that would be Brook. Clownfish are usually some of the more susceptible fish, which makes sense since they often call Brook "clownfish disease."
What are some of the reef safe medicine you have?
I have a 260g system. I was running a dual reator with carbon and GFO. I have been performing 50g (25x twice a week) water changes. My nitrates are at 15 and my phosphates are at 0. I have been fighting cyano for several months. I took the dual reactor off-line last week and started up a refugium. I'm using two return pumps with a combined flow of 1200gph +/-. I am also running a pair of maxspect gyres set to 50%. I have good flow, but there are some areas that visually get more flow than others. Is there a product I can use to add phosphate while still working to reduce nitrates?
You can dose phosphates with something like Brightwell NeoPhos. This won't necessarily lower your nitrates, but it'll help you get things a little more balanced. Unless you're seeing specific issues caused by nitrates, 15 ppm isn't alarmingly high. Most reefers will shoot for somewhere between 1-10 ppm nitrate, so you're not too far off. Especially if you consider the margin of error of our hobby grade test kits.
www.bulkreefsupply.com/neophos-balanced-phosphorus-supplement-brightwell-aquatics.html
My black yellow tail blenny killed bigger fish from stress
If I have cyanos, how would I vacuum every single day? That would be a large water change every day if I dispose the water, or would i recycle the water?
One option would be to siphon into a filter sock so that you can remove the cyano and other detritus, then still re-use some or all of the water.
@@BulkReefSupply BLACK OUT YOUR LIGHT FOR 2 TO 3 DAYS IT WILL NOT KILL YOUR CORAL
Dino fla Galette 😂😂😂
Hi there! As someone with OCD and in the mental health field (I’m an MSW), using language such as “obsessive compulsive” to describe excessive cleaning is quite problematic. Many folks with OCD do not experience a fixation on cleanliness and continuing this stereotype can be invalidating and discouraging to those seeking treatment. I realize that this is not a mental health channel, but it is important to use language that doesn’t perpetuate stigma. Thanks for all the work you do to help me keep better tanks!
whats next...describing black people as having dark skin problematic? I was sure to go back and check...he never said OCD. Seems like you're not paying attention and listening to the voices in your head. Probably why you're OCD. I for one am done with bending over backwards for the mentally challenged.
Thank you for taking time to write this. I was unaware that my words were hurtful and problematic. I will work on eliminating that from my vocabulary. I totally understand as somebody who has also struggled with mental health. Please continue to call me out if I slip up.
@@MyFirstFishTank I really appreciate this response! No offense taken and I respect your willingness to learn. Best wishes!
I hate fish disease. It's almost impossible to get a sick fish out of a display tank.
My six line killed my jester goby. 😢
😢
I added my fish like this clown pair, bangai cardinal, diamond goby, royal gramma, six line wrasse and they’re all homies
I’m against quarantining fish
First of all wife or parents never let me have an extra tank and also that’s why you don’t buy from Petco
Adding the most aggressive fish last plan doesn’t work when you have your tank for more than twenty years.
Had a 6 line wrasse and it bullied my clownfishes
Six lines seem to be so hit or miss on the bullying. Most are model citizens while there always seem to be the one or two bad apples that cause problems.
anyone else notice the dead clownfish at 8:26 seconds?
Editing of intro felt a bit confusing
Best way to add a six line while Still adding fish is to get a small six line
What about adding all fishes at the same time, would it reduces agressive issues?
I feel like it could, but it also rapidly increases the bioload, making a mini cycle likely.
6 lines are wonderful fish. Give him some hiding spots, and you're fine.
I didnt no Tom Arnold had a youtube channel.
Aggressivity??? 🤣🤣🤣
guroo..whats that?
"Guru" is usually defined as a teacher or expert 😀
@@BulkReefSupply is it english?! what language sir?