Do you run carbon in your mixed reefs to try to limit chemical warfare?

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I've been reading about softie chemical warfare, and how brutal they can apparently be, along with of course Paly/zoas. Do you run carbon to try to protect your non-softies, or would it even make a difference?
A lot of people don’t seem to have leathers/softies in mixed reefs but generally everyone I’ve seen with a mixed reef (Softies, LPS, SPS) have ran carbon and found it does great with reducing problems.
 

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I ran carbon in a tank that I didn't have great success with (my fault, parameters weren't what I thought due to calibration issues) and my water was always so clear. I've really debated adding carbon again to my current system that's thriving, just afraid it'll suck up my nitrates or something else and cause my corals to be upset. Curious what others think
 

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I ran carbon in a tank that I didn't have great success with (my fault, parameters weren't what I thought due to calibration issues) and my water was always so clear. I've really debated adding carbon again to my current system that's thriving, just afraid it'll suck up my nitrates or something else and cause my corals to be upset. Curious what others think
Carbon does not absorb nitrates.
 

fullinfusion

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I ran carbon in a tank that I didn't have great success with (my fault, parameters weren't what I thought due to calibration issues) and my water was always so clear. I've really debated adding carbon again to my current system that's thriving, just afraid it'll suck up my nitrates or something else and cause my corals to be upset. Curious what others think
Carbon does not suck up your nitrates.
 
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I started off using seachem Purigen and then added carbon and to be honest I didn't see a difference. I like Purigen better, pretty much does the same thing and keeps your water crystal clear, also it can be reused by following their regeneration method. The resin beads go dark in color when it's exhausted and lasts way longer than carbon.
 

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I run it to clean up what it will and it keeps the water clearer and helps with any chemical warfare. I don't keep leathers but lots of shrooms, ricordia, yuma, zoas, gonipora, alveopora etc. along with LPS and nem's. A lot of fingers have been pointed at carbon causing lateral line in tangs but never been proven. If you're going to run it use something of quality for reefing. Just not something like Walmart "fish carbon". Think I'm still on a 5g bucket I bought from BRS years ago.
 
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I started off using seachem Purigen and then added carbon and to be honest I didn't see a difference. I like Purigen better, pretty much does the same thing and keeps your water crystal clear, also it can be reused by following their regeneration method. The resin beads go dark in color when it's exhausted and lasts way longer than carbon.
I didn't know Purigen helped with this kind of issue. I wonder if it would pull Palytoxin out of the water?

@Randy Holmes-Farley would you happen to know?
 

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Polyp polynomial: How many heads do you start with when buying zoas?

  • One head is enough to get started.

    Votes: 27 10.6%
  • 2 to 4 heads.

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  • 5 heads or more.

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  • Full colony.

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  • Other.

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