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How big of a fuge would it take to pump enough food into a 29? Seems like itd have to be huge!
acroporas;258812 wrote: I am going to go against the grain and say that you will be fine. IF you get one that eats frozen food. Now I do admit that is a big if. It is not easy to train a mandarin to eat frozen food, but if you do, they can and will thrive in a small tank.
The only person around skilled enough to successfully breed Mandarins, Matthew Wittenrich, feeds his broodstock almost entirely Frozen PE mysis. And he has the babies eating rods food and cyclopeze. So to those who say that prepared foods are insufficient. I say to you this. When you have surpassed Wittenrich skill at breeding them, you can say that you know more than him about their dietary requirements. (here is lots of great info about his first attemt at raising mandarins http://www.marinebreeder.org/phpbb/viewtopic.php?t=1963&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=150">http://www.marinebreeder.org/phpbb/viewtopic.php?t=1963&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=150</a>)
And then to thouse who insist that there is just insufficent space in a 29 gallon aquarium for to sustain a mandarin. I will direct you to Matt Peterson. While he has not succsfully raised the larvae yet. His mandarin pair[B]s[/B] spawn every night in is 20-30 gallon aquariums.... Also fed on a diet consisting of entirely prepaired foods.
Additionally, I know of many people who have had mandarins for years that eat pellets as their primary diet.
To thouse who are insisting that you can not keep a mandarin in a small tank. I ask you this. Have you had a mandarin that was eating prepaired foods that was living in a small tank kick the bucket prematurely? I have this suspicious fealing that everyone here is just regurgitating the standard lines without any real experience to back it up.
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Now again I will stress, this is all dependant on you teaching the mandarin to aggressively chase down frozen food. Which is no easy task. It will take a lot of dedication, and a bit of luck, but if you can get it to eat frozen food, it will be fine in your small tank.[/QUOTE]
YES, I have had a mandarin wither away in a 29 gallon.
Is the average hobbyiest a Matt Wittenrich or Matt Peterson? NO. SO, would it not be better to give advice accordingly to the audience requesting such advice?
You can find some mandarins that will eat frozen/pellet foods. You can also find smokers who never get cancer. Would you reccomend smoking since there are people who never get cancer from smoking?
Having said that, it can be done and as acro said in his first sentence, it is a big IF! Why not just get a fish that is better suited for that size tank rather than playing with it's life?
acroporas;258812 wrote: I am going to go against the grain and say that you will be fine. IF you get one that eats frozen food. Now I do admit that is a big if. It is not easy to train a mandarin to eat frozen food, but if you do, they can and will thrive in a small tank.
The only person around skilled enough to successfully breed Mandarins, Matthew Wittenrich, feeds his broodstock almost entirely Frozen PE mysis. And he has the babies eating rods food and cyclopeze. So to those who say that prepared foods are insufficient. I say to you this. When you have surpassed Wittenrich skill at breeding them, you can say that you know more than him about their dietary requirements. (here is lots of great info about his first attemt at raising mandarins http://www.marinebreeder.org/phpbb/viewtopic.php?t=1963&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=150">http://www.marinebreeder.org/phpbb/viewtopic.php?t=1963&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=150</a>)
And then to thouse who insist that there is just insufficent space in a 29 gallon aquarium for to sustain a mandarin. I will direct you to Matt Peterson. While he has not succsfully raised the larvae yet. His mandarin pair[B]s[/B] spawn every night in is 20-30 gallon aquariums.... Also fed on a diet consisting of entirely prepaired foods.
Additionally, I know of many people who have had mandarins for years that eat pellets as their primary diet.
To thouse who are insisting that you can not keep a mandarin in a small tank. I ask you this. Have you had a mandarin that was eating prepaired foods that was living in a small tank kick the bucket prematurely? I have this suspicious fealing that everyone here is just regurgitating the standard lines without any real experience to back it up.
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Now again I will stress, this is all dependant on you teaching the mandarin to aggressively chase down frozen food. Which is no easy task. It will take a lot of dedication, and a bit of luck, but if you can get it to eat frozen food, it will be fine in your small tank.[/QUOTE]
I hate to agree with you:yuk: , but you are indeed correct.
My biggest secret is what you dont want to hear- Bloodworms. But wait... Mysis are a fresh water food too! Wow my reef thrives off of fresh water foods? Holy cow, who would have thunk it?
Now, I do agree that a refugium needs to be full of chaeto and LR. Ideally over 30 gallons, even on a 30 gallon tank. Nothing beats the real thing- Classic Pods. I think adding pods to a display tank is a waste, add them to the fuge with some DT's.
acroporas;258994 wrote: But was it eating prepared (either frozen or dry) foods? Were you even making any effort to teach it to eat prepared foods?
And no tossing food in the tank, watching all the other fish chase down the food in 1 minute and then saying "Nope, he didn't eat any" does not count as teaching.
You don't hand a book to a 5 year old every day and say read and then when the kid just looks back at you with a blank stair say "We'll try again tommorow." Teaching requires some extra effort on your part.
For example, start it off in a 1 gallon basket by itself where it has no competition for the food, and has all the time in the world to think about it. Feed adult live brine shrimp until it attacks them aggressively(which usually does not take long). Then start mixing in some frozen brine shrimp. Start with just a small amount(perhaps 1 dead for every 10 live) then over time increase the proportion of frozen brine until that is all it is eating. Then start mixing in frozen mysis. Once it is aggressively eating frozen mysis (not just eating, but actively chasing them down like a clownfish would) you can then release it into your tank.
If you are not willing to spend the time and effort required to keep a mandarin alive in anything less than a 500 gallon tank where there is sufficient naturally available food, then just say that. "I am too lazy to properly care for a mandarin", don't say that "It is not possible". I am much too lazy to learn to read spanish. That does not mean that it is impossible, and that I should tell others not to try.
Skriz;259010 wrote: True, but then it begs the question of if we should be encouraging the lfs to continue to buy the fish (supply/demand)
grouper therapy;263698 wrote: After reading this thread,I don't know if I can continue in the hobby or become an expert, I'M SO SCARED!!!