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Pet Forum / Aquaria / Marine Reef / October 2006



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Lemon Peel/Mushrooms

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StringerBell - 24 Oct 2006 01:38 GMT
As with most stuff on the internet, I`mgetting mixed messages regarding
Lemon Peel Angels,Coral Polyps and Mushrooms.
Some places say LPAs are reef safe, some say they may nip at soft corals.
 Does anyone have an opinion on this through direct observation? If they do
"nip" mushrooms, do they eat the whole `shroom, or just take chunks out? And
if they do take chunks out, do the corals regenerate?
Due to my tank size I was thinking of the Lemon Peel as an alternative to
Yellow Tangs. I have also heard that the Tangs are more succeptable to
parasites.

Thanks again................
kim gross - 24 Oct 2006 03:38 GMT
> As with most stuff on the internet, I`mgetting mixed messages regarding
> Lemon Peel Angels,Coral Polyps and Mushrooms.
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>
> Thanks again................

Well do you want the good news or the bad?

Good news not all LPA nip at soft corals/ mushrooms, bad news is that
one could start at any day.  They are very unpredicatable.  If they nip,
it will depend on how much they nip and how fast stuff grows in your
tank.  If it nips very little and the corals/mushrooms grow fast you
will not have a problem, but if they are slow growers and the LPA nips a
lot you could end up loosing all of them.

Just as an example, different angel but.  I friend of mine had a flame
angel in his 75 gallon reef tank.  No problems at all for about 2 years.
 Had some nice green frilly mushrooms that were growing like crazy for
2 years.  Then they slowed down on growth, then the stopped growing,
then they started decreasing in numbers.  Never saw flame angel eating
on them, but a powerhead cover failure (actually stupid mistake after
cleaning powerhead) ate the angel, mushrooms started coming back quickly.

Kim
StringerBell - 25 Oct 2006 01:30 GMT
Sigh........
I wonder if its  worth a try.....

> Well do you want the good news or the bad?
>
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
>
> Kim
George Patterson - 25 Oct 2006 04:06 GMT
> I wonder if its  worth a try.....

Depends .... What are you going to do if it fails?

George Patterson
     All successes in conservation are temporary. All defeats are permanent.
StringerBell - 25 Oct 2006 12:45 GMT
>> I wonder if its  worth a try.....
>
> Depends .... What are you going to do if it fails?

I would make sure I could "trade" the fish back before I bought it.
I would just go with a Yellow Tang--- but dont want to risk the disease
hassle. I want some yellow in there though. Maybe one of those little
gobies----but thats not quite the same as a Lemon Peel, eh?
Bryan - 25 Oct 2006 15:56 GMT
Suggestion:

I have cleaner shrimp and am still thinking about this yellow fish.  I've
seen them in the tank with shrimp and all was fine.  They are the most
peaceful of the hogfish and much prettier than this pic.

http://www.peteducation.com/article.cfm?cls=16&cat=1853&articleid=2761

Bryan

>>> I wonder if its  worth a try.....
>>
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> hassle. I want some yellow in there though. Maybe one of those little
> gobies----but thats not quite the same as a Lemon Peel, eh?
Cindy - 26 Oct 2006 00:56 GMT
* StringerBell wrote, On 10/25/2006 6:45 AM:

>> Depends .... What are you going to do if it fails?
>>
> I would make sure I could "trade" the fish back before I bought it.
>  I would just go with a Yellow Tang--- but dont want to risk the disease
> hassle. I want some yellow in there though. Maybe one of those little
> gobies----but thats not quite the same as a Lemon Peel, eh?

citron gobies are cool.  I personally never had a problem with my tang.
StringerBell - 26 Oct 2006 01:30 GMT
"Cindy" <cinshep@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:JQS%g.3046

> citron gobies are cool.  I personally never had >a problem with my tang.

The more I read on the internet, it seems that Lemon Peels are pretty risky
overall. Not a good newbie fish.
I like those little Gobies too.... I`m gonna stock my 65 gallon with little
guys. I just wanted to have 1 or 2 medium size, bright colored free swimmers
to make the tank look nice from a distance. Earlier on I was thinking Yellow
Tang ---but Again, the dreaded internet info overload.After finding a dozen
places that say they are "Easy", I stumbled upon camps that suggest  keeping
Tangs in anything smaller than 48", 75 Gallons is inhumane.(Ive got 36" 65
Gal.)
Ive also read that they prefer to be kept in groups. And that not meeting
these standards are the culprits that make them succeptable to parasites.
Do Y-Tangs ever show up as Juvies---real small, like Quarter size? I often
see the Hippo Tangs that small. I like those guys too---but they just have
that "I`m frail and gonna die in a heartbeat" look to them. If I found a
Yellow that small I guess I could keep it  for a few years before having to
move it out.
Of course I also see posts all over the net about people keeping them in
40s,30s, even 20s.
Wayne Sallee - 26 Oct 2006 17:28 GMT
They do show up small, but tangs need to eat regularly,
and in the process of being kept at the fishermen's
stations, and then being kept at the wholesalers, and then
finally getting to the pet store, they tend to be quite
starved, and often don't hold up well. The medium sized
yellow tangs have more stored energy to live on.

Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets
Wayne@WaynesPets.com

StringerBell wrote on 10/25/2006 8:30 PM:
> "Cindy" <cinshep@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:JQS%g.3046
>> citron gobies are cool.  I personally never had >a problem with my tang.
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
> Of course I also see posts all over the net about people keeping them in
> 40s,30s, even 20s.
 
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