My 150 gallon reef tank has been running well for about twenty five years until about a year ago when I was out of the country for four months and had a total crash. I am now rebuilding with some frags and fish and thinking about addressing my mix of mostly outdated tech. My frags are growing well and fish are happy, but getting a Cyanobacteria outbreak from very low phos and nitrate levels.
Current parameters:
Salinity: 1.027
Calc: 425
Alk: 10.5
Mag: 1350
Ph: Stable between 8.3 and 8.4 (Have a Kalk stir on a pH controller and a Co2 Scrubber on a motorized ball valve also on the pH controller)
Phosphate: Reading 0.00 to 0.03 with Hanna UL Phosphate checker
Nitrates: 0 – Don’t have ultra low test kit yet
Filtration:
Overflow to a 30 gallon refugium with a 7” deep sand bed
Sump return pump feeds through a 40watt uv to a manifold to:
Carbon reactor feeds to an adjustable portion between skimmer and sump to dial in skimmer throughput.
Skimmer feeds back to sump
I have a small clump of Chaeto in my deep sand bed refugium I use to monitor nutrient levels. If it starts to grow I add biopellets, if it starts to die I remove biopellets.
My small ball of Chaeto started to turn brown and die off so I pulled all but about a cup and a half of my biopellets. I also fed more Reef Roids with a cap full of Amino Acids. Still getting plummeting Phos and Nitrate levels; so I am now feeding unwashed frozen San Fan brand Brine Shrimp to dump high levels of phosphates and nitrates to the system.
One of my goals to make the tank as survivable as possible with only minimum maintenance, ideally only once or twice a month.
Rather then constantly changing the amount of feeding and or the amount of biopellets being run, would it be cleaner to just adjust the duration the skimmer is running each day? My understanding of biopellets, is that the reactor does not remove anything, it just nurtures bacteria that congeals the phosphates and nitrates for the skimmer to remove. If the skimmer is off, would that congealed bacteria then return to the display tank to feed the coral and elevate the Phosphate and Nitrate levels?
Thank you for any suggestions.
Current parameters:
Salinity: 1.027
Calc: 425
Alk: 10.5
Mag: 1350
Ph: Stable between 8.3 and 8.4 (Have a Kalk stir on a pH controller and a Co2 Scrubber on a motorized ball valve also on the pH controller)
Phosphate: Reading 0.00 to 0.03 with Hanna UL Phosphate checker
Nitrates: 0 – Don’t have ultra low test kit yet
Filtration:
Overflow to a 30 gallon refugium with a 7” deep sand bed
Sump return pump feeds through a 40watt uv to a manifold to:
- Display tank return
- Carbon reactor
- Biopellet reactor
Carbon reactor feeds to an adjustable portion between skimmer and sump to dial in skimmer throughput.
Skimmer feeds back to sump
I have a small clump of Chaeto in my deep sand bed refugium I use to monitor nutrient levels. If it starts to grow I add biopellets, if it starts to die I remove biopellets.
My small ball of Chaeto started to turn brown and die off so I pulled all but about a cup and a half of my biopellets. I also fed more Reef Roids with a cap full of Amino Acids. Still getting plummeting Phos and Nitrate levels; so I am now feeding unwashed frozen San Fan brand Brine Shrimp to dump high levels of phosphates and nitrates to the system.
One of my goals to make the tank as survivable as possible with only minimum maintenance, ideally only once or twice a month.
Rather then constantly changing the amount of feeding and or the amount of biopellets being run, would it be cleaner to just adjust the duration the skimmer is running each day? My understanding of biopellets, is that the reactor does not remove anything, it just nurtures bacteria that congeals the phosphates and nitrates for the skimmer to remove. If the skimmer is off, would that congealed bacteria then return to the display tank to feed the coral and elevate the Phosphate and Nitrate levels?
Thank you for any suggestions.