Hey Reefers!
I am very new to the hobby with just shy of 2 months on my tank. As corny as it sounds I really feel like I have a deeper understanding of systems. The seriousness of knowing these animals and life are dependent on your level of care really drives me to learn and understand as much as you can.
I have so much more I want to understand but one aspect that really feels like a black box to me are nutrients. Like many I definitely am guilty of overfeeding. I left on a short vacation for the first time and with only a single clownfish the Eheim autofeeder was a little aggressive on the lowest setting for a small clown. When I came back everything was much greener and evidence of green cyano was all over the sand. I was worried the added food was increasing the load on the system. After testing the water I found 0.10 ppm nitrate, 0 ammonia, phosphates at 0.05 ppm, and all the items I dose are looking good (Alk, Cal, and Mag all stable).
Clearly the algae growth is absorbing the extra nutrients sort of like a sponge. Another aspect is seeing how well the copepods and hydroid medusae are doing. I worry like a sponge or battery I cannot just change the inputs to reduce the nutrients without shocking the system. How would those of you with more knowledge and experience think about dealing with low nutrients because there is so much absorbtion capacity in the system?
I am very new to the hobby with just shy of 2 months on my tank. As corny as it sounds I really feel like I have a deeper understanding of systems. The seriousness of knowing these animals and life are dependent on your level of care really drives me to learn and understand as much as you can.
I have so much more I want to understand but one aspect that really feels like a black box to me are nutrients. Like many I definitely am guilty of overfeeding. I left on a short vacation for the first time and with only a single clownfish the Eheim autofeeder was a little aggressive on the lowest setting for a small clown. When I came back everything was much greener and evidence of green cyano was all over the sand. I was worried the added food was increasing the load on the system. After testing the water I found 0.10 ppm nitrate, 0 ammonia, phosphates at 0.05 ppm, and all the items I dose are looking good (Alk, Cal, and Mag all stable).
Clearly the algae growth is absorbing the extra nutrients sort of like a sponge. Another aspect is seeing how well the copepods and hydroid medusae are doing. I worry like a sponge or battery I cannot just change the inputs to reduce the nutrients without shocking the system. How would those of you with more knowledge and experience think about dealing with low nutrients because there is so much absorbtion capacity in the system?