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Thread: Copepod dwellings

  1. #11
    Join Date
    02-27-2008
    Location
    Austin, TX (NW Austin)
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    283

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    Quote Originally Posted by crabman View Post
    i'm up for that, do you know of any places that might give a group discount? maybe others will want in.
    Not off-hand, but I can ask the suppliers I've ordered from before. Maybe they will be friendly to repeat buyer
    ~ Z 's Pods, Harlequin Shrimp Pair, and Beemer, King of the Nano ~
    ~ Collector of the rare and unusual (or just plain expensive) ~

    JBJ HQI 28g Go clicky here!



  2. #12
    Join Date
    04-01-2008
    Location
    New Braunfels
    Posts
    161

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    Quote Originally Posted by zcatzmeow View Post
    Not off-hand, but I can ask the suppliers I've ordered from before. Maybe they will be friendly to repeat buyer
    that would be awesome! and with this particular product we might become repeat group buyers!

  3. #13
    Join Date
    08-01-2006
    Location
    San Marcos
    Posts
    2,373

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    Also a little it of live rubble in one of the back compartments will provide a nice haven for pods, while also supplying your tank!!!
    Is Reef Madness Catchy???

  4. #14
    Join Date
    09-02-2006
    Location
    Corpus Christi, TX
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    I'd buy a small masonry drill bit and commence to making as many small holes (Swiss Cheese Effect) in your live rock with out making it too brittle\weak. This will give your pods a place to hide and reproduce. It works well. I know because I did it about 6 months ago on some base rock and I've already seen the difference in my pod population. Be sure to have another bucket full of RO water on stand by to thoroughly rinse the sediment from your newly drilled rock or it will cloud up your water. Also don't leave your rock out to long or you'll have more than the usual amount of die off which in turn will give you an ammonia sp-ike (had to put the -dash- because of the forum word filter) . Give it a try & trust me, it works.

    PS most pods need to eat some sort of phytoplankton to live and reproduce, so you'll need to feed your tank some phyto regularly for them to proliferate.

    -David
    Last edited by SoLiD; Sat, 26th Apr 2008 at 05:04 AM.

  5. #15
    Join Date
    01-02-2008
    Location
    NW Crossing, San Antonio
    Posts
    743

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    Thanks for the info catz! A group order would indeed be an interesting proposition.

  6. #16

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    if yall do a group order let me know.

  7. #17

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    I have heard you aat least a 1 year old tank with 90 pounds of live rock. There are things you can do though.( for a dragonet)

  8. #18

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    For every reef system that I start up for a customer, I decaspulate 2 Tbl sp of brine eggs and add them to the refug. In about a months time, there is a boom of life in the mains tank and below. The brine become food for every little critter and fish in the system. Soon the amount of pods starts becoming noticeable. Just a helpful tip for you all out there.
    WWW.THEFISHGUY.ORG
    Your Fish's Best Friend

  9. #19
    Join Date
    02-27-2008
    Location
    Austin, TX (NW Austin)
    Posts
    283

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jonthefishguy View Post
    For every reef system that I start up for a customer, I decaspulate 2 Tbl sp of brine eggs and add them to the refug. In about a months time, there is a boom of life in the mains tank and below. The brine become food for every little critter and fish in the system. Soon the amount of pods starts becoming noticeable. Just a helpful tip for you all out there.
    Ooh! Great idea! I'm going to have to try that
    ~ Z 's Pods, Harlequin Shrimp Pair, and Beemer, King of the Nano ~
    ~ Collector of the rare and unusual (or just plain expensive) ~

    JBJ HQI 28g Go clicky here!



  10. #20

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    I'he heard that Cell-Pore has openings a good size for copepods and maybe too small for amphipods. It might be a safe haven for the little guys. Just throw in a brick or some cubes.

    I always thought that mandarin dragonettes eat copepods and not amphipods or mysis, live that is.

    Here's a link:

    http://www.drsfostersmith.com/produc...fm?pcatid=4169

    Jack
    Big whorls have little whorls, Which feed on their velocity;
    And little whorls have lesser whorls, And so on to viscosity

    Lewis Richardson in 1922

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