Complete noob just starting out!

e92er

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Hey all,
Complete noob here to aquariums but we started with a little 5 gallon fish bowl we used for a betta once that didn't last and then started reading more about keeping fish and realized I knew nothing!
So here's my first step in
Innovative Marine 15gallon with a clownfish and a royal dottyback. Added some turbo snails and blue legged hermit crabs a few weeks ago and a cleaner shrimp. Think I'm done with adding fish. Now starting on coral. There's a GSP on it's own little island. A single hammer on one side, a candy cane, and a zoa up top.
I got everything from Pure Reef and Matt's been extremely helpful!
Can't wait to keep adding more coral as fast as I can get em!
 

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Welcome to the deep end!

Not in any way to discourage you, but rather to inform, so you know what to be on the lookout for and can plan ahead...

(TL;DR: your tank is not big enough for a clown and a dottyback together, turbo snails are too big for your tank, and take it slow on adding corals)

Speaking only for myself, I would be at least a little nervous about a clown and a dottyback in a 15-gallon tank long term. Both fish can be territorial, and dottybacks in particular have something of a reputation for being spicy little jerks once they get established. In a bigger tank, that can sometimes be managed because each fish has room to claim territory and avoid the other, but there is nowhere to really escape in a 15 gallon. If one starts harassing the other, the loser can wind up in a pretty constant state of stress with nowhere to get out of sight.

Like, I seriously don't mean to be the sort to shout "doom", nor do I want to be the bearer of bad news, but I've looked and looked at multiple primary sources, as well as asked 3 4 different LLM's - ChatGPT, Google Gemini and Perplexity.AI and Claude - all while being VERY careful not to bias the results with my search terms/questions, just to make sure I wasn't off-base in my immediate reaction, and I cannot find anyone or anything that thinks that pairing of fish in a tank this size is a good idea. I'm frankly kind of shocked that the people at Pure Reef let you walk out the door with them if they knew anything about your setup.

That same concern can extend to the shrimp, too. Not every dottyback is a cold-blooded murderer, but they absolutely can be hard on smaller inverts, and there is not much refuge in a tank that size. Even if the two fish manage to establish some sort of stalemate, if that shrimp finds a safe hole, you may never see it again except when lights go out.

Honestly, it is just harder to stock a tank that small effectively than a lot of people realize. You might get lucky and get away with this pairing, but I would suggest paying close attention, especially as the fish mature, and being prepared to isolate or rehome one of them quickly if things ever go south - the chances of which I'd personally rate as being very high sometime in the next year or so. If they make it to ~2 years without fighting, you're probably fine. I definitely won't say it isn't possible that they could get along - I've worked with too many animals for that - but I'd give it better than even odds they won't.

Also, FYSA, turbo snails get surprisingly large - easily the size of a golf-ball, on the small end, up to tennis-ball sized! - and in a tank the size of yours they can become absolute bulldozers. I think they're a bit much for a 15 gallon personally - too big, IMO, for my 50-gallon - so I would be prepared either to rehome them later or to make sure every frag is glued or epoxied down very securely. I'm surprised Pure Reef sent you home with these as well, to be honest, at least not if they knew all you had was a 15-gallon AIO.

For a tank that small, I'd usually lean more toward a lighter, more appropriate cleanup crew than turbo snails. Something like 1 nassarius vibex - maybe 2, max - or ~4 dwarf nassarius, plus some dwarf ceriths. Then if you can get them, collonista or stomatella are both great little utility snails for nanos (and can usually be readily sourced from other club members here). Finally, maybe 1 trochus, or 2 max if the tank already has enough film algae to feed them both: if not, I'd stick with one for now, and maybe keep a small amount of invert or algae-grazer food on hand in case it needs supplementing.

Only thing to keep in mind is nassarius snails are scavengers, not algae eaters, so they help with leftover food and turning over the sand more than they do with film algae. Everything else listed will accomplish most of what people usually want turbos for, without turning the tank into a turbo-snail bowling alley. Also, nassarius are climbers, so a lid or screen top is a must anyway, just like it is with clowns.

I know a lot of folks just do not have room for anything bigger than a nano, and that is totally fine, but it does mean you started at one of the harder ends of the hobby. Reef systems have a lot more moving parts, and the smaller the water volume, the faster things swing. So regular water changes and stability matter a lot here, and stability in a smaller volume can be a much more challenging task than it is in larger tanks.

Also depending on your coral load, you may or may not wind up needing to dose alkalinity and calcium any time soon, but you still want to keep a close eye on pH, alkalinity, nitrate, and phosphate, and go ahead and have either Kalkwasser, All-For-Reef, or a two-part solution on hand for when you need it.

Still, with these and everything else, focus less on chasing target numbers, and more on keeping things as stable as possible: if you need to hit a different number, get there slowly ("slowly, slowly, catchee monkee").

In the same vein, your tank is new. You're going to have a LOT of "ugly phases" over the next 12 - 24 months, especially if you didn't do an extended lights-out phase before introducing fish and corals. If you haven't added copepods, order them NOW, along with a bottle of phytoplankton to feed them with (you'll only need maybe 7ml per day, so a single 16oz bottle will last you a good while), and be prepared to add another bottle of pods in about 3 - 6 months.

Between pods, not overfeeding, and not blasting lights too bright, too soon you can definitely shorten the ugly phases, but they ARE going to happen. Stick with things that work slowly, like adding some decorative macroalgae, or accepted-safe biological/bacterial levers like collonista and stomatella snails, and things like Microbacter Clean.

Slow down a bit on the coral additions though, and keep in mind that coral warfare - both with stinging sweeper tentacles like your hammer coral will extend, and chemical warfare via allelopathy - is a very real thing, and the effects are magnified in your small tank: I've seen my favia corals extend sweepers easily 3" long, and that 6" diameter is close to a quarter of your volume. There's also far less water in the system to thin those chemicals out before they start reaching toxic concentrations. You need to give them time to adjust, and make sure they're settled and not competing with other corals for nutrients and space. Add too many, too fast or too often, and when something goes wrong ('when' being the operative word - it's a learning process, and if it were easy everybody would do it), it will be that much harder to know just what happened. Not to mention, each and every coral brings its own needs and impacts on the system, and if you just keep adding them all the time, you'll be continuously chasing those.

Finally, in case you haven't heard it before, let me leave you with the single most valuable and important piece of advice I've ever been given in this hobby: "Nothing good happens fast in a reef tank."

(Again, welcome, to the hobby and to the forums! I wish you nothing but success, and we're here to help if we can!)
 
Wow thank you so much for the extremely thoughtful response! I read it last night and it gave me a lot to think about!

I've also read the same about the clownfish and dottyback AFTER I got them on all the AI LLMs and I think in the back of my mind I was hoping they'd be wrong. Then after reading your message, I figured I should go ahead and expect to have to rehome the dottyback at some point. Well I told my wife and daughter that and they both lost it and asked me why we can't just get another bigger tank 😂!! So thank you! I think I just got permission to upgrade!! 😁😁

The rest is a learning experience. We got the 15g because of space and cost restraints. My wife also knows I'm the type to get into something, spend a lot of money on it and then move on to something else so we showed some restraint with this in case it goes the same way (I hope not)! I've been watching the BRSTV videos daily just trying to "hear" as much as I can so I can start learning what I need to learn.

I've been adding to the CUC slowly, nassarius snails is next but I was waiting for my sand to get a little "dirtier." Didn't know about the collonista snails. Dang these turbo snails have been fun to watch cuz yea, they're bulldozers!

Started dosing with Reef Fusion 1&2 depending on numbers but watching more for trends rather than hitting the "perfect number." I did learn a lesson real early with water changes and took out more water than I had to put back in! That was a mini-heart attack! Luckily the Petco by me had Tropic Marin Reef salt, but then in my nervousness, I overshot by a mile how much to add and shot my salinity high! Took a week to get it back down and luckily the fish survived and I didn't have any coral at that point.

Eek. I don't have any copepods. I saw the company Bulldawg Reef online over in Canton and was thinking of driving over one of these days but sounds like I need to do that sooner rather than later!

Will definitely slow down on adding corals. Some of those Zoas look so cool though! 😁

Thank you again for the advice, I truly appreciate it and I hope to be in this hobby for a good long while!!! I catch my whole family just standing in front of the tank watching everything all the time and love the effect it's having on them and on me!
 
Wow thank you so much for the extremely thoughtful response! I read it last night and it gave me a lot to think about!
(Part 1 of 2)

My pleasure, glad it was well received. I know it was a lot - I can definitely be verbose, I know - but you kind of have a lot going on, and I hope people would rather know and be able to prepare and plan, rather than be told what they want to hear. Especially in this hobby, where you simply can't ever know "enough".

I've also read the same about the clownfish and dottyback AFTER I got them on all the AI LLMs and I think in the back of my mind I was hoping they'd be wrong. Then after reading your message, I figured I should go ahead and expect to have to rehome the dottyback at some point. Well I told my wife and daughter that and they both lost it and asked me why we can't just get another bigger tank 😂!! So thank you! I think I just got permission to upgrade!! 😁😁
Yeah, no, I feel you. For reference, I tore my last reef down in early 2008. I finally put water in my second (and current) reef in April of 2025: I spent 17 years thinking about my next tank and what I wanted from it. In the time since I got the lights for this tank (Dec 2024) till now (my tank won't get its first fish until about another 7 or 8 weeks) I've done a LOT of reading on what kinds of fish I want to stock my tank with - both the royal gramma and the dottyback came up for their amazing coloration, but as I want a peaceful community reef (I'm so over aggressive fish and the constant hassle) and have a smaller footprint (believe it or not, 50 gallons is still on the small side for a reef) I had to exclude both from my plan. When I saw your post, alarm bells immediately went off, so off I went back to my normal sources. Then I asked the AI's, one after another, and all of them jived the same way, picking out that pairing immediately as trouble in that small volume.

Still, that's hilariously awesome that the wife and kiddo are invested thanks to that pretty fish :)

Personally I'd suggest no less than 75 gallons with a full sump if you can manage it. 50, at the minimum, if you want to keep both those fish in the same tank. No reason you can't run both tanks at the same time, either, tho!

IN FACT, I have a 15-gallon cube hooked up to my 50-gallon as a refugium! It DID have to be drilled, first, though: I would never trust an overflow box for this kind of setup.

View attachment 110927
(old pic!: the frag rack on the front glass was temporary, lol, don't roast me 😅 yes, the two tanks normally reverse-lit: the main tank is on from 2:30 - 10:30pm, the cube is lit the other 16 hours of the day, but it's technically a "display refugium" and part of my filter system, not just another fish tank sharing the same water)

Still, the bigger the tank you can manage (yes, they obviously come with increased costs for lighting and filter equipment), the easier it will be to stock, manage, and keep stable.
The rest is a learning experience. We got the 15g because of space and cost restraints. My wife also knows I'm the type to get into something, spend a lot of money on it and then move on to something else so we showed some restraint with this in case it goes the same way (I hope not)! I've been watching the BRSTV videos daily just trying to "hear" as much as I can so I can start learning what I need to learn.
That will be continuous - our understanding of the animals and the hobby is ever-evolving. It was a little astonishing just how much changed in the time I was out: what had been gold-standard then (Ultra Low Nutrient Systems, or "ULNS", for example) is sometimes not just passe, but considered horribly wrong in many cases. 17 years ago I would have never imagined intentionally adding ammonium chloride directly to my tank, either, but here we are, using it to help our tanks cycle, and raise NO3 (nitrate) if/when it dips low.

I have similar habits, to you, though I might be more restrained, perhaps on spending money. Still, some things I stick with, and animals are one of them. I've always had fish tanks whenever I could in my living situation and finances. I've ALWAYS had a cat. Often a dog. A reef tank is its own, ongoing reward, as long as you manage it and the workload well and don't let it burn you out on small stuff. And while we should always plan/hope that we have no losses and everything goes perfectly, you HAVE to plan (and prepare!) for failure, and go into this hobby expecting a possible tank crash and total reset: it can take as little as a power-outage that goes to long to start everything into a spiral... or something you can't even see coming, or readily measure.

It CAN be a lot of work to start with. And while the amount will peter off a bit, there will always be tests and maintenance to be done. The question is how much planning, money and effort are you willing to devote to automating those tasks... but even then, it won't ever be as simple and easy as freshwater. I feed my FW fish 6 days a week, top off their water when its low, and do water changes about once a year - that's it. You kinda HAVE to do weekly water changes in saltwater, no ifs, and, buts, or "one easy trick" here. There's a never ending stream of things to learn, but... for me anyway that's one of the things that keeps it fascinating.

The BRStv stuff can be a great resource, especially for something you can just listen to. In your current state, I can recommend this one pretty highly: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLBaMLrfToJyyywPKnlV7P--e6VG3umjW6

I'd leave the one you have in place for the foreseeable future (as long as the fish don't start fighting), and try to biome-cycle your new larger tank (you can help kickstart it using seeded media from your 15-gallon), leaving the lights off in the new big tank for the first few months while you let liverock and/or bottled coraline starter, bottled bacteria, and copepods do their thing and get it truly ready for you to move the fish over. Will also give you plenty of time to work on your aquascaping (see link for BRStv video on the subject). Once the new bigger tank has been wet and fully dark for ~12 weeks, then you can start bringing the lights up SLOWLY, and begin moving your fish and corals over.

But, if like me, you find zen in your saltwater tank that freshwater just can't match... it's worth every last bit of it. I just wish my ricordea coral would finally quit sulking!
I've been adding to the CUC slowly, nassarius snails is next but I was waiting for my sand to get a little "dirtier." Didn't know about the collonista snails. Dang these turbo snails have been fun to watch cuz yea, they're bulldozers!
As I'm nearby, I'd offer you collonista snails from my tank, but I've recently discovered I have flatworms in my system. Harvesting collonista shouldn't be much of a risk, but I can make no guarantees. I also have pod hotels full of copepods and amphipods (the latter of which your fish will eat), and I don't *think* there are flatworms in them, but I cannot be sure. Regardless, I'm kind of unwilling to risk using Flatworm Exit and potentially damage the biodiversity I've spent the last year building carefully.

TBH as a new reefer, I wouldn't suggest taking anything from other people's tanks unless/until you FULLY understand the risks and potential consequences. Mine has had stuff introduced from other people's tanks in the last few weeks, and while I have reason to believe they're clean, I cannot be absolutely certain of it, and I'm guessing you don't have a quarantine/hospital tank setup (though at least temporarily repurposing your AIO for that while you're stocking your larger tank isn't necessarily the worst idea).

Still, depending on the size of tank you get (I'd recommend 75g+ for turbo snails), you can keep them. If not, consider Nassarius Vibex snails: they max out about the size of a quarter or so, but have kinda similar behaviors, moving surprisingly fast, climbing the glass, and generally bumbling about, my wife and mother really love watching the all-white ones I have sniffing around.

If you DID want one of my pod hotels but aren't quite as worried about microfauna diversity as I am (the vast majority of people don't share my concerns), you could grab one ($25, $5 discount for supporting members) and just treat the tank with Flatworm Exit... but I still cannot be >90% sure that there is no risk of ich, velvet or brook in my system for another ~9 weeks or so (which is about when my first fish are going in).

Started dosing with Reef Fusion 1&2 depending on numbers but watching more for trends rather than hitting the "perfect number." I did learn a lesson real early with water changes and took out more water than I had to put back in! That was a mini-heart attack! Luckily the Petco by me had Tropic Marin Reef salt, but then in my nervousness, I overshot by a mile how much to add and shot my salinity high! Took a week to get it back down and luckily the fish survived and I didn't have any coral at that point.
Happens to almost all of us, but good on you for not being reactive and watching for trends over time, that's a common mistake that has caused many a reef to crash from overcorrection too fast. Even a hyper- or hypo-salinity event is survivable, as long as you manage it slowly and carefully.
 
(Part 2 of 2)
Eek. I don't have any copepods. I saw the company Bulldawg Reef online over in Canton and was thinking of driving over one of these days but sounds like I need to do that sooner rather than later!
So, I'm gonna suggest our own @Justin Ranke to the fore here, he's local, a club member and supporter, and his business Fast Phyto and Copepods has quality product, amazing customer service, ships promptly (and not just on select days of the week), and since he's local your order spends far less time in the FedEx/UPS/USPS blender. Bulldawg Reef I hear good things about, but have no experience with... and they're not an ARC sponsor last I checked, so....

Otherwise the other places I have experience with and can recommend are Dinkins Aquatics (though they had a little bit of minor controversy about a year or so ago? that some people don't like them for, but their product is outstanding) and AlgaeBarn.

And yes, copepods are really a day one thing. And depending on your system and livestock, possibly a 2 - 4 times a year kind of thing. But ESPECIALLY in a new tank, and an AIO quite that small, with fish in it already, you're going to want to add them probably every 3 - 6 months for the first year.

Will definitely slow down on adding corals. Some of those Zoas look so cool though! 😁
Trust me I know how you feel - I wish zoas did better in my tank. It's good to get a few corals added early, but like I said, they all have their own needs and impact on a tank, and no less than as with fish, it's best not to buy things on sight at the store unless you did your research first, had a list in mind, and just happened to see something that fit your plan, and not just what struck you in the moment. Use the store to get an idea of what you like the look of, go on a hunt online for more variations, and then study up on each to find out whether it's appropriate.

Many kinds of coral, for example, are "encrusting" types, which zoas technically fall under. Let them loose on a piece of your rockwork, and they could just take it over entirely. Now, if you decide you want ALL your rock covered in zoas, cool! You can do that! BUT, there's a reason many people have "zoa rocks" isolated on their sandbed, to keep them from taking over the tank. How easy would it be otherwise to set a piece of rock on another rock, only to realize you now basically have a kudzu problem... except this kudzu is mildly toxic to both your fish tank AND you (if it has and releases palytoxin, which zoanthids can/do).

Leather corals can look cool, but also dominate a small tank. Carpet anemones are my favorite, but can get like, 16 - 24" across?!

So, best to get a plan together and go with a phased, planned approach. Add things mainly with intent, or at least armed with knowledge and consideration in advance. "I want this, this, and this type that I think will work" and then picking up one or two as you see them is fine, just give them a few weeks to acclimate before you add another - patience and careful observation will reward you greatly in a reef tank. If you use AI to help, use one primary, and cross-check it against others and your own reading.

If you don't already have one, start a journal/log of your tank. Even ADHD as I am, I manage to log the majority of everything I do in there, and being able to look that stuff up (when I dose what, how much dosed, measurements/readings, additions of corals or livestock, water changes or other maintenance efforts (changing filter media, manual algae removal) along with photos has really saved me a lot of trouble and worry in the past. If you can afford an Apex unit - even just find one used, as long as the probes are still newish - I'd highly recommend it almost for the logging/graphing functionality alone.
Thank you again for the advice, I truly appreciate it and I hope to be in this hobby for a good long while!!! I catch my whole family just standing in front of the tank watching everything all the time and love the effect it's having on them and on me!
Again, happy to do it, and to see someone else and their family both getting invested.

And FWIW, I have no experience at Pure Reef... but your experience makes me very hesitant to suggest others should rely on their advice... unless someone misheard you and thought you said "Fifty gallon" and not "Fifteen gallon": that's the only remotely reasonable explanation I can imagine for how you came home with those two fish and two turbo snails.

Of the active LFS' who sponsor ARC and are relatively nearby, I might point you to @SqueakysAquatics. I HAVE talked to the folks there. Their showroom may not be as impressive as Pure Reef, but you're also not paying a HUGE markup for location and appearances - their showroom and tanks are still clean, however, and prices are more than fair. The staff seems very knowledgeable, AND they actually do proper prophylactic medicated quarantine on all their fish, keeping them in separate, fully isolated systems both during and after QT: it's not a substitute for a full 80-day copper and formalin treatment if you're THAT paranoid/demanding, but I think what they do is more/better than any other store in the area I know of, and more or less equivalent to what the big online vendors like FisHotel and Marine Collectors do... so even if you're slightly more paranoid than most (like I am) but not COMPLETELY paranoid (like someone at, say, Georgia Aquarium should be), that's a heck of a lot better than nothing. Speaking for myself, I have a hospital tank, so I'll be putting the fish I get from them in there for 2 weeks of observation before I add them to my tank.

Also, they're willing to have a real conversation, learn about your system, offer advice, etc. without pushing you to buy, and, at least in my case, were happy to take my proposed stocking list and just go ahead and order everything on it, in advance, without a dime from me, just so it would be out of quarantine and ready for me as soon as I'm ready for it - if it sells before then, they'll just order me another.

Oh, and they're an official Waterbox Aquariums dealer, so if you were thinking of buying a brand-spanking-new fishtank, it's hard to go wrong with a Waterbox: can't think of anything in particular I don't like about mine.
 
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