Just a quick update
Hand fed the Duncans today. Got some pellets moist and went on a bombing run over the corals. Got a direct hit on each head after the pellets got past the clowns.
The diatoms have started to go down. There's noticeably less build up on the sand bed and glass. Still there but easy to deal with. I realised I'd inadvertently extended my diatom bloom by adding extra CaribSea Life rock (dry) to my sump, to prop up some frags to stop the hermits knocking them over on the sand bed and a couple of islands in preparation for new corals. Live and learn.
NO3 went down to 0.02 and PO4 had never been above 0.03 before I started increasing feeding. Currently:
NO3 0.02 -> 5.0
PO4 0.03 -> 0.1
Alk 8 -> 9
I throttled back the feeding a little after losing one of my hermits. There's just the beginnings of algae film starting to appear on surfaces, so the way forward for me is to tackle the algae by biological means (as suggested by Ollie76).
New CUC
New inhabitants
These have all been spotted in the past week:
Copepods & Rotifers
I've finally found an online seller that sells the above with Phytoplankton in a package. They will be another part of biological algae control and food for any inverts. As I feed phyto, I think the UV steriliser won't really be an option unless things get out of hand.
If there any errors in my thinking, please let me know. Any ideas or suggestions welcome.
Hand fed the Duncans today. Got some pellets moist and went on a bombing run over the corals. Got a direct hit on each head after the pellets got past the clowns.
The diatoms have started to go down. There's noticeably less build up on the sand bed and glass. Still there but easy to deal with. I realised I'd inadvertently extended my diatom bloom by adding extra CaribSea Life rock (dry) to my sump, to prop up some frags to stop the hermits knocking them over on the sand bed and a couple of islands in preparation for new corals. Live and learn.
NO3 went down to 0.02 and PO4 had never been above 0.03 before I started increasing feeding. Currently:
NO3 0.02 -> 5.0
PO4 0.03 -> 0.1
Alk 8 -> 9
I throttled back the feeding a little after losing one of my hermits. There's just the beginnings of algae film starting to appear on surfaces, so the way forward for me is to tackle the algae by biological means (as suggested by Ollie76).
New CUC
- 2x Nassarius
- 3X Banded Trochus
- 1X Orange lipped Conch
- 3X Electric Blue legged hermits (small ones)
- 1x Red Fire Shrimp (possibly)
New inhabitants
These have all been spotted in the past week:
- Stomatella snail (well over an inch)
- 5 or 6 new tiny feather dusters (where did they come from?)
- A small star fish (quite dark)
- A "white ant" trolling across the glass. Assume it was an amphipod
Copepods & Rotifers
I've finally found an online seller that sells the above with Phytoplankton in a package. They will be another part of biological algae control and food for any inverts. As I feed phyto, I think the UV steriliser won't really be an option unless things get out of hand.
If there any errors in my thinking, please let me know. Any ideas or suggestions welcome.