COMMON BEGINNER MISTAKES WITH MARINE AQUARIUMS by Cliff
After being asked about, and reading about, many situations where hobbyist experience problems with their first marine aquariums, (as well as thinking back to my first marine aquarium) you could attribute almost all of these difficulties to the below list of the most common mistakes people can make with their first marine aquarium.
These are not listed in any particular order as I just typed them out as I remembered them. You have to keep in mind; the severity of any of these potential mistakes will vary greatly between hobbyists based on their situation and their actions taken. Any one of these common beginner mistakes when setting up your first marine aquarium can lead to minor problem you may not even notice all the way to completing crashing your tank and everything in between.
1. Incorrectly Topping up for Evaporation
It is very common for new hobbyist to make this mistake. What happens is they notice the water level in their aquarium has dropped due to evaporation. They will mix up some new salt water and add it to the aquarium to replace the tank water that was lost through evaporation. What they don’t stop to realize is that only pure water evaporated leveling all the salt and minerals behind. Over time (maybe a few weeks to a month) the salinity in the tank will raise from the salt in the top up water until it reaches a high enough level to crash the tank, or the hobbyist tests the tank, notices a problem, and makes adjustments. That is why you must top up with fresh water and not salt water.
2. Overfeeding
This can be the easiest mistake to make for people new to the hobby, and is a pretty common problem to find. When you see your fish beg for food you might falsely assume you are not feeding enough, not realizing how much food your fish actually needs to be healthy. Others may overfeed by feeding there fish too often each day (like 2 or 3 times a day) not realizing their particular fish will do best when fed 3 or 4 times a week. Overfeeding can lead to two different and serious problems: 1) it can have a negative effect on the long term health of your fish, and 2) you will be creating water quality problems through excessive fish wastes, or rotting fish food on your substrate, or even both situations at the same time. Both negative effects can build up in your aquarium over time and actually lead to a tank crash if not corrected.
This is an easy situation to completely avoid if you research not only the nutritional requirements for your fish but also the amount of food they should get every day or week. These requirements and optimal feeding schedules can vary widely between the different types of marine fish so I cannot offer you a “rule of thumb” to use.
3. Starting off with a tank that is too small.
While having a small tank (ie. less than a standard 29 gallon) may seem like a good idea or an easier approach to your first marine aquarium, but it really is not. I would leave the small tanks to experienced hobbyists. Small setups can be challenging at the best of times to maintain stability in all of the important water parameters. Stable parameters are the key to long term success. The larger the set-up, the more water you will have and the easier it will be to maintain your parameters. The extra water volume will also buffer the effects of any mistakes you could make with your first setup. And let’s face it, we have all made mistakes with our first marine aquariums. I have read about a lot of situations were hobbyist run into serious problems setting up a 5 or 10 gallon as their first marine aquarium, struggling to keep fish, corals, or both alive in their tank for any length of time. When choosing a tank, start as big as you can afford. If you can’t afford at least a 29 gallon tank for your first set-up, then I would suggest waiting until you can afford it.
I would recommend a standard 55 or 75 gallon tank as a very good size for your fist marine aquarium as it is a very popular larger tank size making it easier to find equipment as well as used equipment to suit tight budgets
4. Improper Salinity Levels
I am still amazed at how many people in the hobby today (new and otherwise) still under estimate the potential benefits of maintaining their salinity at or near 1.026, which is the specific gravity of the ocean at the average temperature and depth were we find most of the corals and fish that we keep in the hobby. The lower your salinity is from 1.026, the more you will risk having challenges maintaining other aspects of water parameters. I always prefer my salinity to be between 1.025 and 1.026. This is about 35.5 PPT (parts per thousand) for those of you who prefer using that scale/method to measure salinity.
5. Not Enough Water Changes
I have found it to be a somewhat common perception many new hobbyist to marine aquarium that you really should not be changing water. I have often asked people with this perception what they base that opinion on. In a large number of the replies that I have received, the person had read articles about how others will set up a beautiful marine aquarium and maintain it with next to no water changes. The part that most people to not properly understand is that these are mature set-ups being maintained by people with decades of experience who have spent years researching and perfecting their skills to develop and maintain the proper balance and other requirements to achieve this. Without this background and specialty or required equipment in place, you will need to do about 10% weekly water changes to not only replace the trace elements in the water that are required by all life forms in our aquariums, but this will also help to prevent the buildup of dissolved solids, toxins, and excess nutrients in your aquarium. If you were to stop doing water changes for a month or so, you would most likely start to see degradation in water conditions likely leading to a tank crash in about a year.
6. Adding Live Rock to a Already Cycled and Stocked Aquarium
I have been asked and this question a few times worded in a few different ways, “ I have a ammonia spike and I do not understand why as I just added some more live rock to my tank, how can there be ammonia if I increased my filtration capacity?”. I have found that many stores sell live rock and tell hobbyist that it is cured rock as the stores typically buy it as uncured live rock freshly harvested from the ocean and let the rock cycle/cure before selling it to their customers. New people to the hobby get the impression that if it is already cured/cycled, so they can just put it directly in their already set-up and cycled aquarium without worry. That is a false belief. When rock (either cured or uncured) is removed from the water and exposed to the air, you will start to get die-off of bacteria and other living organisms that are on the rock. The longer the rock is out of the water and exposed to the air, the more die-off there will be. The quality of the live rock may also play a factor here as well. And as you know, this die off (decomposing marine life and bacteria) will add ammonia to your aquarium. It’s not a matter of “if” but a matter of “how much”. Sometimes the ammonia spike can be so small and so short that there is no noticeable impact to your water quality. Other times the resulting ammonia spike can crash your tank. You should always re-cure any live rock you buy before adding it to your tank just to be safe.
7. Not Properly Planning Your First set-up
Sometimes people will buy a used set-up or use a aquarium and equipment they had in storage setting it up as a marine aquarium then try to figure out how to make it work and what to stock in it. This approach can often lead to disappointment or additional expense when you have to up-grade equipment. I would suggest taking the following approach: first decide what type of marine aquarium that you want, and then decide what you will stock in it, then start planning your set-up and all the equipment that you will need around the requirements of what you will be stocking.
8. Poor Quality Water and/or Salt
As mentioned above, water quality is among the most important of aspects to keeping a healthy marine aquarium. Besides proper maintenance, another important factor of your water quality is the quality of the fresh water and the quality of the salt that you use to make up new saltwater. Your goal should not be to find the cheapest possible salt to try a save a few dollars. Take your time and do a little research to find a good quality salt. You don’t need to buy the most expensive salt out there but you do need a good quality salt. This will go a long way to help you stabilize your water parameters. Just as important is the quality of fresh water you use, the two go hand in hand.
9. Inadequate Water Flow and Movement
The ocean’s reefs where the fish and corals come from that we keep in the hobby have underwater currents and/or waves moving seawater through and around them. In order to help us have a healthy set-up, we must reproduce at least some of this water movement in our aquariums. Without proper water flow in the aquarium, you can develop problems like: low levels of dissolved oxygen in the water, the buildup of slime, other types of nuisance algae, negative effects on the water quality, and prevention of some animals receiving food just to name a few.
10. Stocking too fast
Sometimes people will get caught up with the excitement of setting up their first marine aquarium and add almost all of their planned stock in a very short period of time or even all at the same time. The problem with adding all of your stock at once or within a short period of time to most newly set-up aquariums is that the biological filtration most likely will not be handle all of the stock being added at once without allowing time to aquarium’s filtration to adjust and be able to handle the increase in waste being produced by the fish. This type of situation will affect your water quality even to the point of crashing a tank in extreme situations. The best way to avoid this is to make sure you have properly planned your filtration and you add your fish slowly over weeks or months allowing the filtration system expand to meet the growing demand.
It may also be helpful to understand how to properly cycle a marine aquarium which will help you better understand when to start adding fish.
11. Incompatible or Inappropriate Stock
When you hear statements like: I can’t understand why my tangs just won’t get along, why does my trigger harass my lionfish, or my firefish went missing after I added my large lionfish, then you know compatibility was not considered when adding fish to the tank. Also when you see pictures of 4 or 5 very small pre-juvenile tangs in a 29 gallon tank, or a beautiful snowflake ell in a 30 gallon tank, you know no consideration was given to caring for these fish for the duration of their lives. Careful consideration must be given to ensure the fish you put in your tank can happily live out their lives together and that you know how to properly care for them. After all, they are just not fish, but living animals. You cannot trust the employees at a local fish store to do this research for you as the vast majority of them do not know your setup as well as you do, or they may only be interested in making a sale. This is another reason why impulse buys often lead to problems later on.
12 Not Quarantining New Fish
One of the toughest lessons that I had to learn the hard way is the importance of quarantining new fish before adding them to your set-up. When I was starting out in this hobby I did not use a quarantine tank and I was lucky for a quite a few years. But then my luck ran out and I had a whole tank wiped out by adding one little fish that was carrying a disease but did not show any symptoms early on. That was when I started learning how to quarantine fish and actuating following a quarantine process. Based on what I have read, having a tank’s complete stocking wiped out by a disease introduced from a new fish has driven more people out of the hobby than anything else. The good news is this is completely avoidable when you follow a good quarantine process.
After being asked about, and reading about, many situations where hobbyist experience problems with their first marine aquariums, (as well as thinking back to my first marine aquarium) you could attribute almost all of these difficulties to the below list of the most common mistakes people can make with their first marine aquarium.
These are not listed in any particular order as I just typed them out as I remembered them. You have to keep in mind; the severity of any of these potential mistakes will vary greatly between hobbyists based on their situation and their actions taken. Any one of these common beginner mistakes when setting up your first marine aquarium can lead to minor problem you may not even notice all the way to completing crashing your tank and everything in between.
1. Incorrectly Topping up for Evaporation
It is very common for new hobbyist to make this mistake. What happens is they notice the water level in their aquarium has dropped due to evaporation. They will mix up some new salt water and add it to the aquarium to replace the tank water that was lost through evaporation. What they don’t stop to realize is that only pure water evaporated leveling all the salt and minerals behind. Over time (maybe a few weeks to a month) the salinity in the tank will raise from the salt in the top up water until it reaches a high enough level to crash the tank, or the hobbyist tests the tank, notices a problem, and makes adjustments. That is why you must top up with fresh water and not salt water.
2. Overfeeding
This can be the easiest mistake to make for people new to the hobby, and is a pretty common problem to find. When you see your fish beg for food you might falsely assume you are not feeding enough, not realizing how much food your fish actually needs to be healthy. Others may overfeed by feeding there fish too often each day (like 2 or 3 times a day) not realizing their particular fish will do best when fed 3 or 4 times a week. Overfeeding can lead to two different and serious problems: 1) it can have a negative effect on the long term health of your fish, and 2) you will be creating water quality problems through excessive fish wastes, or rotting fish food on your substrate, or even both situations at the same time. Both negative effects can build up in your aquarium over time and actually lead to a tank crash if not corrected.
This is an easy situation to completely avoid if you research not only the nutritional requirements for your fish but also the amount of food they should get every day or week. These requirements and optimal feeding schedules can vary widely between the different types of marine fish so I cannot offer you a “rule of thumb” to use.
3. Starting off with a tank that is too small.
While having a small tank (ie. less than a standard 29 gallon) may seem like a good idea or an easier approach to your first marine aquarium, but it really is not. I would leave the small tanks to experienced hobbyists. Small setups can be challenging at the best of times to maintain stability in all of the important water parameters. Stable parameters are the key to long term success. The larger the set-up, the more water you will have and the easier it will be to maintain your parameters. The extra water volume will also buffer the effects of any mistakes you could make with your first setup. And let’s face it, we have all made mistakes with our first marine aquariums. I have read about a lot of situations were hobbyist run into serious problems setting up a 5 or 10 gallon as their first marine aquarium, struggling to keep fish, corals, or both alive in their tank for any length of time. When choosing a tank, start as big as you can afford. If you can’t afford at least a 29 gallon tank for your first set-up, then I would suggest waiting until you can afford it.
I would recommend a standard 55 or 75 gallon tank as a very good size for your fist marine aquarium as it is a very popular larger tank size making it easier to find equipment as well as used equipment to suit tight budgets
4. Improper Salinity Levels
I am still amazed at how many people in the hobby today (new and otherwise) still under estimate the potential benefits of maintaining their salinity at or near 1.026, which is the specific gravity of the ocean at the average temperature and depth were we find most of the corals and fish that we keep in the hobby. The lower your salinity is from 1.026, the more you will risk having challenges maintaining other aspects of water parameters. I always prefer my salinity to be between 1.025 and 1.026. This is about 35.5 PPT (parts per thousand) for those of you who prefer using that scale/method to measure salinity.
5. Not Enough Water Changes
I have found it to be a somewhat common perception many new hobbyist to marine aquarium that you really should not be changing water. I have often asked people with this perception what they base that opinion on. In a large number of the replies that I have received, the person had read articles about how others will set up a beautiful marine aquarium and maintain it with next to no water changes. The part that most people to not properly understand is that these are mature set-ups being maintained by people with decades of experience who have spent years researching and perfecting their skills to develop and maintain the proper balance and other requirements to achieve this. Without this background and specialty or required equipment in place, you will need to do about 10% weekly water changes to not only replace the trace elements in the water that are required by all life forms in our aquariums, but this will also help to prevent the buildup of dissolved solids, toxins, and excess nutrients in your aquarium. If you were to stop doing water changes for a month or so, you would most likely start to see degradation in water conditions likely leading to a tank crash in about a year.
6. Adding Live Rock to a Already Cycled and Stocked Aquarium
I have been asked and this question a few times worded in a few different ways, “ I have a ammonia spike and I do not understand why as I just added some more live rock to my tank, how can there be ammonia if I increased my filtration capacity?”. I have found that many stores sell live rock and tell hobbyist that it is cured rock as the stores typically buy it as uncured live rock freshly harvested from the ocean and let the rock cycle/cure before selling it to their customers. New people to the hobby get the impression that if it is already cured/cycled, so they can just put it directly in their already set-up and cycled aquarium without worry. That is a false belief. When rock (either cured or uncured) is removed from the water and exposed to the air, you will start to get die-off of bacteria and other living organisms that are on the rock. The longer the rock is out of the water and exposed to the air, the more die-off there will be. The quality of the live rock may also play a factor here as well. And as you know, this die off (decomposing marine life and bacteria) will add ammonia to your aquarium. It’s not a matter of “if” but a matter of “how much”. Sometimes the ammonia spike can be so small and so short that there is no noticeable impact to your water quality. Other times the resulting ammonia spike can crash your tank. You should always re-cure any live rock you buy before adding it to your tank just to be safe.
7. Not Properly Planning Your First set-up
Sometimes people will buy a used set-up or use a aquarium and equipment they had in storage setting it up as a marine aquarium then try to figure out how to make it work and what to stock in it. This approach can often lead to disappointment or additional expense when you have to up-grade equipment. I would suggest taking the following approach: first decide what type of marine aquarium that you want, and then decide what you will stock in it, then start planning your set-up and all the equipment that you will need around the requirements of what you will be stocking.
8. Poor Quality Water and/or Salt
As mentioned above, water quality is among the most important of aspects to keeping a healthy marine aquarium. Besides proper maintenance, another important factor of your water quality is the quality of the fresh water and the quality of the salt that you use to make up new saltwater. Your goal should not be to find the cheapest possible salt to try a save a few dollars. Take your time and do a little research to find a good quality salt. You don’t need to buy the most expensive salt out there but you do need a good quality salt. This will go a long way to help you stabilize your water parameters. Just as important is the quality of fresh water you use, the two go hand in hand.
9. Inadequate Water Flow and Movement
The ocean’s reefs where the fish and corals come from that we keep in the hobby have underwater currents and/or waves moving seawater through and around them. In order to help us have a healthy set-up, we must reproduce at least some of this water movement in our aquariums. Without proper water flow in the aquarium, you can develop problems like: low levels of dissolved oxygen in the water, the buildup of slime, other types of nuisance algae, negative effects on the water quality, and prevention of some animals receiving food just to name a few.
10. Stocking too fast
Sometimes people will get caught up with the excitement of setting up their first marine aquarium and add almost all of their planned stock in a very short period of time or even all at the same time. The problem with adding all of your stock at once or within a short period of time to most newly set-up aquariums is that the biological filtration most likely will not be handle all of the stock being added at once without allowing time to aquarium’s filtration to adjust and be able to handle the increase in waste being produced by the fish. This type of situation will affect your water quality even to the point of crashing a tank in extreme situations. The best way to avoid this is to make sure you have properly planned your filtration and you add your fish slowly over weeks or months allowing the filtration system expand to meet the growing demand.
It may also be helpful to understand how to properly cycle a marine aquarium which will help you better understand when to start adding fish.
11. Incompatible or Inappropriate Stock
When you hear statements like: I can’t understand why my tangs just won’t get along, why does my trigger harass my lionfish, or my firefish went missing after I added my large lionfish, then you know compatibility was not considered when adding fish to the tank. Also when you see pictures of 4 or 5 very small pre-juvenile tangs in a 29 gallon tank, or a beautiful snowflake ell in a 30 gallon tank, you know no consideration was given to caring for these fish for the duration of their lives. Careful consideration must be given to ensure the fish you put in your tank can happily live out their lives together and that you know how to properly care for them. After all, they are just not fish, but living animals. You cannot trust the employees at a local fish store to do this research for you as the vast majority of them do not know your setup as well as you do, or they may only be interested in making a sale. This is another reason why impulse buys often lead to problems later on.
12 Not Quarantining New Fish
One of the toughest lessons that I had to learn the hard way is the importance of quarantining new fish before adding them to your set-up. When I was starting out in this hobby I did not use a quarantine tank and I was lucky for a quite a few years. But then my luck ran out and I had a whole tank wiped out by adding one little fish that was carrying a disease but did not show any symptoms early on. That was when I started learning how to quarantine fish and actuating following a quarantine process. Based on what I have read, having a tank’s complete stocking wiped out by a disease introduced from a new fish has driven more people out of the hobby than anything else. The good news is this is completely avoidable when you follow a good quarantine process.
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