Hey all, first time poster.
I just picked up a 220g (my first large tank). I've been doing Reef setups for the past few years, largest being 123g, and am just now venturing into planted tanks/larger fish species. The 220g in question will be fish only, freshwater, no plants, sand/wood/rocks as aquascape. My question is in regards to filtration: Do I NEED a sump/canister filter for a tank of this size? I would much prefer to be able to have a few monster sponge filters but I'm worried the sponge filters will have a hard time managing the bio-load of larger species of fish due to how messy of eaters they habitually are.
In response to the inevitable question, I don't know yet what I will be stocking the tank with. I would love to have an arrowana (not sure I feel comfortable putting an arrowana in a 7ft tank) , datnoid, oscar (maybe), jaguar, jack dempsey, etc.. Obviously this list is far from complete, I will be checking species compatibility before anything goes in. But the main point here is all of the fish I want are big fish, with big appetites, and big bio-loads. I'm not sure the sponge filters would be able to keep up with it.
The reason I would prefer to use sponge filters over canister/sump is simplicity. I travel for work a lot and my wife will be managing the tanks while I'm away. She's familiar with sump setups, but I'm looking to reduce my risk factor. Cost is also a huge plus, sponge filters are much cheaper. If I HAVE to add a sump it's not the end of the world, the tank is already drilled with overflows on both corners.
Anyways, any information y'all could provide would be wonderful. Thank you in advance!
-Kirby
I just picked up a 220g (my first large tank). I've been doing Reef setups for the past few years, largest being 123g, and am just now venturing into planted tanks/larger fish species. The 220g in question will be fish only, freshwater, no plants, sand/wood/rocks as aquascape. My question is in regards to filtration: Do I NEED a sump/canister filter for a tank of this size? I would much prefer to be able to have a few monster sponge filters but I'm worried the sponge filters will have a hard time managing the bio-load of larger species of fish due to how messy of eaters they habitually are.
In response to the inevitable question, I don't know yet what I will be stocking the tank with. I would love to have an arrowana (not sure I feel comfortable putting an arrowana in a 7ft tank) , datnoid, oscar (maybe), jaguar, jack dempsey, etc.. Obviously this list is far from complete, I will be checking species compatibility before anything goes in. But the main point here is all of the fish I want are big fish, with big appetites, and big bio-loads. I'm not sure the sponge filters would be able to keep up with it.
The reason I would prefer to use sponge filters over canister/sump is simplicity. I travel for work a lot and my wife will be managing the tanks while I'm away. She's familiar with sump setups, but I'm looking to reduce my risk factor. Cost is also a huge plus, sponge filters are much cheaper. If I HAVE to add a sump it's not the end of the world, the tank is already drilled with overflows on both corners.
Anyways, any information y'all could provide would be wonderful. Thank you in advance!
-Kirby