A Beginners Guide To Reef Keeping

This will not be an in depth, step by step guide to new aquarists. It will be more like a guide sheet with summaries I have concluded over the years.
But let us imagine that John is looking at the colorful displays at his local pet store. He decides that he would like an aquarium and proceeds to..... Well, what's next?

There are an awful lot of choices to be made when starting out in the hobby.
Let's take a look at some good choices to get off to a good start.

First, before you buy anything, except for study material, you need to have at least some idea about what it is you will attempt to create.
Is it a saltwater aquarium with predator fishes that will rule out adding corals, or perhaps a seahorse display where correctly adjusted water flow will be important. A lot of people see the dazzling colors of reef tanks packed with stony corals.
What you have to consider is how your choices in livestock will alter the requirements of the equipment you need to purchase. Making the right or better choices early on can significantly reduce overall cost of keeping an aquarium.

It pays off to learn some basics and plan ahead as much as possible before purchasing equipment.
It is not at all unusual to spend $200, $300 or more on lights and then learn after six months that they aren't adequate for the livestock one would like.

After making some choices you are ready to purchase equipment.

To get a good start, you ideally will add live sand and live rock to your aquarium filled with new saltwater.
At this point you have the option of adding fish when the tank seems stable, or do what you will eventually be happy you did and wait as long as you can before adding any fish and corals. During this period, all the micro fauna and flora that is essential to a visually healthy and balanced aquarium will thrive due to the absence of predators, yes corals are meat eaters. No doubt this is a difficult step as you are no doubt impatient getting the tank to look like the masterpiece you envision. Patience at this step however cannot be overvalued.

Live sand is more than the bacterially active sand purchased from the stores. Quality live sand has worms and mini brittle stars and other life that will work to keep your sand bed healthy and clean. If you start with dry sand or the sand that is only live on a bacterial level then your live rock will have to seed the sand, and it can easily take a year to get a good sand bed infauna going.

Live rock should be purchased uncured in my opinion. Get fresh uncured live rock and cure it yourself while performing frequent water changes to keep ammonia and nitrite to a minimum. This will ensure that some of the life that comes in on the rock will survive. Again this type of life will be greatly beneficial to your tanks overall health.

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