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tHEcONCH

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  1. WHAT IS THE BEST WAY TO DO THIS ?DO YOU JUST LET IT FLOAT AROUND THEN LET YOUR PRE-FILTER TAKE CARE OF IT THEN CLEAN YOUR PRE-FILTER.

    THANKS PERREN

    Yes and no - grab as much out as you can when you scrape it off, and then collect the rest as it gets stuck on your intake grill / black foam. Make sure you don't let it block up too much, or your RSM's circulation pumps will start blowing bubbles :wink:

  2. It is an unwinnable debate - some prefer the benefits of the critters etc that live in the sand (especially if you want a pod eating fish like a Mandarin), others prefer the ease of cleaning. If you want to keep a Mandarin fish, you MUST have sand, otherwise whatever you prefer the look / sound / cost of :wink:

  3. Bristlenose damage the membrane surface of the leaf. Then that section of the leaf dies and rots away. Initially there seems to be no damage then it shows up a day or two later. They seem to be the only algae eating fish to cause that type of damage to sword plants.

    Add Blue Panaque to that list - little buggers :-?

  4. For ease, I usually dose the whole tank at about 1mg/litre, so work out your tank volume, work out how many tablets you need (I assume you have 200 or 400 mg tablets, so for example a 200 litre tank would need 10 x 200mg tablets or 5 x 400 mg tablets) and just crush them into a glass (I squeeze them between two spoons until they turn to powder) then add some water, swish it about and pour it on top of the water - that's it. Some dust will settle on the bottom - don't worry, that's just caking agent used to stick the drugs together). Wait 3 days, do a 25% water change, and repeat. I work on the theory that although the fish doesn't ingest the drug directly, it is absorbed through the gills into the bloodstream when water laden with it passes through. It seems to work.

    Alternatively you can crush it into / onto food, and try and direct feed it, which should be more effective (especially with agressive eaters like angels)

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