- Joined
- Oct 27, 2019
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Hey guys,
I wonder what - in your experience - are things which seem to be "common knowledge" in the reefing world which are actually pretty wrong-headed.
Off the top of my head:
I wonder what - in your experience - are things which seem to be "common knowledge" in the reefing world which are actually pretty wrong-headed.
Off the top of my head:
- The idea that if you choose to have a DSB, you should stir the sand yourself in order to avoid buildup of hydrogen sulphide. Stirring makes this more likely to happen because you end up crushing worms and pods burrowing in the sand, which then decay in an anoxic environment.
- That hermits are a good, reef-safe element of a clean-up crew. There are many issues with hermits. They need shells, and often kill snails for them. They're omnivores, and tend to decimate a lot of the micro-fauna on rockwork. They're not even reef animals, more suited to a lagoon biotope.
- That any time you see a hitchhiker - even a bristleworm - you freak out and kill it with fire unless you're 100% certain what you're dealing with.
- The idea the best way to deal with pest organisms is to introduce a predator which will also eat a ton of other tank fauna.
- That tank temperatures should be in the high 70s rather than the low 80s.
- That polyp extension means corals are actually feeding.
- The most important by far - that the person you talk to at the LFS has any idea what they're talking about.