Is your aquarium open-top?

Discussion in '3reef Site Polls' started by Matt Rogers, Aug 5, 2009.

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Is your aquarium open-top?

  1. Yes!

    67.0%
  2. No.

    33.0%
  1. JJK

    JJK Teardrop Maxima Clam

    Joined:
    Mar 7, 2009
    Messages:
    845
    Open. But I do get lots of humidity and evaporation - have to look in to a dehumidifier for my living room. Oh, and no firefish or other jumping gobies for me....bad experience already with a diamond goby
     
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  3. acemow

    acemow Purple Spiny Lobster

    Joined:
    Mar 17, 2009
    Messages:
    481
    Location:
    Cape Coral, Florida
    The top is open on mine, it had a canopy and we took the hinges and the lid off because of heat and air flow issues, I made gutter guard framed "jump" preventers that are removable
     
  4. Triplemom

    Triplemom Pajama Cardinal

    Joined:
    Nov 4, 2008
    Messages:
    1,410
    Location:
    Tennessee
    Not anymore! :lol: Losing a beautiful pinkbar goby (who was paired with our pistol shrimp) and then my favorite coral beauty prompted us to come up with first an egg crate night top, and finally the canopy for the contest. I had a hard time with losing those fish. :(

    Now I know what goes in the tank, stays in the tank. ;D
     
  5. JBL

    JBL Sea Dragon

    Joined:
    Jan 3, 2009
    Messages:
    539
    Location:
    Long Island, NY
    Well, I have the glass fronts on, but eggcrate material with Tule on it as a barrier for the gobies on the back. (under the lights that is). I did have just the eggcrate, but darn gobies still fit through the eggcrate holes.
     
  6. mirandacollc

    mirandacollc Flame Angel

    Joined:
    Aug 25, 2008
    Messages:
    1,505
    Location:
    Lebanon ME
    I have a canopy but no top otherwise. If I am going on vacation then I will put my glass top on it for evap reasons. I burn 2 gallons a day in evap so I have a hard time toping off if im gone for a few days. If I run glass top I evap 2 gallons every 3-4 days.
     
  7. Robman

    Robman Great White Shark

    Joined:
    Jan 22, 2009
    Messages:
    2,688
    Location:
    Katy, Tx.
    I voted open, but I have a canopy--I assume that closed meant lids directly on top the aquarium
     
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  9. Geoff

    Geoff Teardrop Maxima Clam

    Joined:
    Mar 10, 2009
    Messages:
    808
    Location:
    Jasper,Al
    open top and so far no jumpers :) .
     
  10. Crimson Ghost

    Crimson Ghost Blue Ringed Angel

    Joined:
    Nov 14, 2008
    Messages:
    1,560
    Location:
    Somewhere south of disorder
    Wonderful thread for my morning coffee…tnx!

    Tank covers are valuable fish savers and miserable death traps at the same time. With that said, I have covers on my 180 for several of the reason posted on this thread.

    Hold your breath for a minute, the driving force to breath again is because your lungs are filling with Carbon dioxide, the term is “Gas exchange”. Your body replaced the carbon dioxide for oxygen – with each breath oxygen enters your blood stream and you feel great for it.

    Guess what, it’s the same with your aquarium – your water being the lungs, blood and heart. As fresh oxygen races across the surface of the water the more harmful gases (ie, carbon dioxide) are permitted to be exchanged and your water become oxygen enriched and your fish are healthy. Hmmm….we should mention this to OttsD in the thread “why won’t my fish live” it’s a possibility anyway. Covering a tank prohibits the gas exchange and permits dangerous levels of toxic gas to rise to the point where your fish can….well, honestly – drown. Absent of oxygen in our systems a fish can’t survive.

    So if I believe this why do I have covers ? jumping fish mostly and a huge “curious” eel. But I use a 55 gallon sump in the basement that is open with fans blowing across it and a separate 50 or so gallon refugium (fuge is only 20 gallons, other sections are used for media, skimmers etc.) the point is that I exchange gas elsewhere.

    Of course another topic effected from poor gas exchange is our PH. As our tank metabolizes (converting oxygen into carbon dioxide) absent of decent exchange the PH will drop. You know this from the recent conversation regarding fuge lighting – photosynthesis in the fuge and the production and absorption of carbon dioxide (see Mr. Steve Wrights post). When the lights are on in the fuge the macro algae is taking up carbon dioxide – this will raise your PH. With the lights out everything is metabolizing including the macro’s in the fuge so the carbon dioxide rises, lowering your PH. This is why a fuge should always be opposite the DT photo period – the tank is producing carbon dioxide at night but the fuge is on and consuming it. The result is more stable PH – and PH swings suck. <-- hey look, a new bumper sticker "PH swings suck"...nah, I didn't steal that from "mean people suck" really, I didn't ! I need more coffee -- enjoy the day friends.
     
    Last edited: Aug 6, 2009
    2 people like this.
  11. lunatik_69

    lunatik_69 Giant Squid

    Joined:
    Jul 10, 2007
    Messages:
    7,933
    Location:
    Miami, FL

    Exactly, I understand about the fish jumping, but in my 23+ yrs of be an Aquarist, I've only had two fish jump.


    Luna
     
  12. Crimson Ghost

    Crimson Ghost Blue Ringed Angel

    Joined:
    Nov 14, 2008
    Messages:
    1,560
    Location:
    Somewhere south of disorder
    I have but half of your experience and I have only had one jump -- make sense to me :)

    But with two kids and an emotional wife, one is enough to do it !!