I had a small 160L tank, cost about 1000 dollars. Kept spending money buying more zoas and palys before I realized the filefish was eating them - he never did it while I was watching and started about 3 months after having him. Cute little gobshite though. Isolated him in a temporary tank, but then aiptasia started growing. Filefish back, zoas got munched. Left the hobby now but I fear I might do it all again.
As I know it itâs usually if youâre not connected to the city sewage system and use a septic tank. You can throw TP in there but it might end up blocking some anti-return valves (and cause bad smells to float up the plumbing, potentially bypassing the water trap or just saturating it and then diffusing out) and would also warrant more frequent drainings of the tank due to the added bulk. The easy way is to just bin them. While TP is made to dissolve into a gooey mess, it depends on the ratio of water:TP and if the water is moving or not. A simple flush might leave bits stuck in said valves.
If youâre bored, you can put some TP in water in different ratios and move it around or not and see what happens.
Or if you have very old plumbing that would be more prone to clogging.
Begone, Satan!
This hits so hard on so many levels. I started with a freshwater shrimp cube. Then it snowballed from there.