Hundreds or even thousands of species of microalgae and photosynthetic bacteria may appear in your aquarium. Before treating any type
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Clean Up Crew
Natural coral reefs are oligotrophic (i.e. nutrient-poor) environments. What’s more, they tend to harbor an unusually high density of very hungry animals. Given their extremely low levels of algal productivity, and their minimal quantities of organic sediments, one could easily describe these environments as pristine.
Aquariums? Pristine? By and large, not so much. Especially when they contain more than one or two fish. Poopy sludge all over! And algae over the sand, over the rock, over the tank panels… Is that what you imagined when you built your saltwater aquarium system? Very likely not! Most probably, you envisioned something naturally clean like the reef itself.
To have such a system, free of fouling algae and detritus, one must include all members of the natural reef community. This certainly includes certain herbivores (especially algae-grazers) and detritivores. These animals should be well-represented in any aquarium big or small. While they are not always very colorful or exciting, they serve a vital purpose--cleaning. Thus, collectively, they are referred to as the clean-up crew.
These assemblages typically include “cleaner’’ animals such as snails (Nassarius, Trochus, Astrea, etc.), sea urchins or decapod crustaceans such as small, reef-safe shrimps or crabs. While dominated by invertebrates, there are a few small fish species that fit the bill. Indeed, to achieve maximum cleaning efficiency, the more the diverse the crew, the better!
This crew is truly a team. The most carefully selected clean-up crews do not exhibit undue or excessive competition. Firstly, one should be careful not to get too many individuals of the same species. It may be tempting to do just that when frustrated with, say, huge films of prolific green algae. But issues might show up down the road through overstocking or starvation that occurs after the food source has been depleted. For example, snails might starve to death; worse, deaths of these little gastropods often go unnoticed, leading to decomposition, nutrient spikes and increased levels of organic waste.
Secondly, and perhaps even more importantly, for excessive competition and maximum efficiency, the team should exhibit strong niche partitioning. In other words, make sure that each type of animal has its own resources and is specialized in exploiting them. For example, pincushion urchins and Nassarius snails both eat algae; however, while the urchin consumes it more quickly, the snail can alternately use detritus as a resource. Though Nassarius snails consume detritus more efficiently than copepods, copepods nevertheless are much smaller and so gain access to tiny pools of sludge (e.g. between little fissures in the rock) that are unreachable by the snail.
In this article you will learn how particulate organic matter and algae accumulate in aquaria as well as which types of clean-up crew animals most effectively eliminate which types of these waste accumulations.
46 Posts
Corals in a Box of Water: Creating a Natural Reef Tank
We’ve come a long, long way in advancing natural marine aquarium keeping. Those of us who started out in the 80’s with barren
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Why EcoPods are the Best Live Copepod Product Ever
Earth is a planet of pods. Wherever there is water, there are amphipods, isopods, branchiopods, and so on. Pods are an integral part of
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A Look at the Detritus Cycle
One of the biggest challenges of keeping a successful reef aquarium, especially over the long term, is maintaining the purity of the
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The Cerith Snail: A ‘Must-Have’ Cleaner
Most aquarists are already aware that snails eat algae. To be most correct, the majority of snail species are algivores. To be sure,
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Sea Urchins in the Reef Aquarium
My first sight of a real, live sea urchin was in an aquarium (a friend’s) rather than in the sea. This was in my youth (i.e. quite a
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Building Your Refugium Clean-Up Crew
No one ever said that keeping reef aquaria is totally uncomplicated. Especially keeping them clean! Sure, some maintenance approaches
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Unique Algae Eaters for your Aquarium
Even though battling algae is best done by finding and solving the underlying nutrient or lighting issue, it certainly doesn’t hurt to
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Saltwater Tank Cleaners
Utilizing saltwater creatures is one of the best ways to keep aquariums clean. Not only are you adding more interesting organisms, but
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All About Saltwater Snails
They are found in freshwater, saltwater, and on land; they are called snails! Hobbyists have found saltwater snails to be one of the
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Kickstarting Your New Refugium
Whether it's just been installed as part of a bone-dry, newly set up aquarium system or as an add-on to a well-established, heavily
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A Beginners Guide to a Saltwater Aquarium Clean Up Crew
By: Haley Fitch
2018 Writers Contest Winner!
When setting up your new saltwater aquarium, it is vital to include a strong clean up
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A Copepod Cornucopia: How to Maintain a Continuous Live Food Source in Your Reef Aquarium
Some of us aquarists are satisfied just to find a pod or two in our systems—just to know that they’re still there! Then again, some of
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Amphipods and/or Copepods: Can They Peacefully Coexist?
Detritus and algal films compromise the aesthetic appearance and environmental quality of any saltwater aquarium. For sure, they
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Stocking a Refugium
Marine aquaria have a peculiar way of growing (in terms of both size and complexity) over time. These “add-ons,” be they filtration
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Pincushion Urchins (Lytechinus variegatus): The Algae Destroyers
No matter who you are, how skilled you are as an aquarist, how diligent you are at cleaning your tank, how little you feed or how
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From Detritus to Delicacy: Using Harpacticoid Copepods for Natural Nutrient Cycling
Pretty much nobody wants their marine aquarium to be covered with filth and green slime. Yet, mulm and benthic microalgae show up (at
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Are There Copepods in Your Reef?
Are There Pods in Your Reef?
Copepods are an integral part of nearly all natural marine ecosystems, and it’s likely that a large,
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Pods In Your Reef: Seeding a Marine Aquarium with Copepods
Benefits of Pods In Your Reef:
Microcrustaceans (or “pods”) in general, and copepods in particular, are an integral component of
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Utilizing the Trochus Snail (Trochus spp.)
Algae, of course, is not an inherently bad thing; without it, the natural world could not exist as we know it. However, there are many
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