Good lord!!!!All of them. SPS are at the top, he was holding a lot of my high end stuff. These are the SPS in his tank
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Good lord!!!!All of them. SPS are at the top, he was holding a lot of my high end stuff. These are the SPS in his tank
Phosphates. It's got what corals crave.Good lord!!!!
;WideyedAll of them. SPS are at the top, he was holding a lot of my high end stuff. These are the SPS in his tank
Nah. I never had any algae until I introduced bubble algae, and since I had nothing that eats bubble it took over.;Wideyed
Po4 is corals friend eh? Do u think having po4 higher is why u have little spurts with algae breaking out?
Nah. I never had any algae until I introduced bubble algae, and since I had nothing that eats bubble it took over.
Otherwise that friends tank has 4.0+ phosphates and he has zero algae.
There's this old myth that po4 = algae. There's more to it than that, but nobody seems willing to look at the evidence. Many, many, many people have high po4 and no algae.How is that possible without having nuisance algae popping up everywhere?
Richard Ross -- Whats up with Phosphate
Wow, thanks so much for sharing that. So again the idea of "balance" comes out of the shadows. He mentioned that it appeared that if dKh levels are maintained at higher levels, it allowed the corals the calcify faster due to higher levels of carbonate and bicarbonate. (High nutrient levels)
I run around 8.8-9.2 dKh. Perhaps my nutrients are just fine and I just need to find that balance with the alkalinity without sacrificing Ca levels. Will have to be a slow change and perhaps going to Tropic Marine salt. I use Fritz Rpm Blue current.
The ATS dropped his no3 by 50%!!! That sealed the deal for me, because I considered one if I decide to go Predator for the dream build down the road.
The reference to "Tanked" was hilarious.
Thanks again.
Well said !And Richard Ross is a marine biologist with years of experience, a phd in marine biology, and in his video you saw his nitrates would go above 100, and phosphates up to 5.0 at some point. He never had any problems, and is a 2 or 3x aquariast of the year. Flown all over the world to talk about what he knows.
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Carbonate and Bicarbonate are alkalinity, nutrients are separate (Ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, phosphate) -- But you get the idea! Dana Riddle also had a talk about this, I think he called it "supercharging photosynthesis", in which he found the perfect Alk / DKH was 9.0 as it gave the most photosynthesis and growth. BRS had their own experiment where they found 12 dkh to increase growth by over 60% (measured by coral weight) over 9 dkh.
I tried my Alk at 12, and I won't lie, my corals LOVED it. Growth and color was absurd. BUT, the moment something went wrong (my fault) that 12 alk became an instant liability to them. The only thing that didn't love it were a few mushrooms. Otherwise even my LPS didn't seem to mind at all.
There's a delicate balance of things, where several important factors intersect. Alkalinity, Lighting, Nutrients. You need to find your individual balance with these three elements. For some people it's easy, and for others it's not. One tank with a low alk and low light and high nutrients may brown out, same tank with higher lighting will color up.. But if light is too high for alk you'll get corals stressed out and burning. If alk is too high for nutrient level you'll get the same results. Etc etc etc.
These three things are the largest factor in reefing, to me, and some people can just find the balance by watching closely and connecting the dots, while others just keep struggling. I always refer to reefing as playing detective when it comes to finding out where your balance is, and what works for you, your system, and your type of reefing. You really do have to deconstruct things to give you that 'a ha' moment where it all clicks. And to do that, you must be vigilant to note all the little changes and their effects. This can be challenging, because I also tell people "Coral are like tree's, the rarely do anything quickly" -- So positive effects may take months to manifest, while negative effects are thankfully instant.
And Richard Ross is a marine biologist with years of experience, a phd in marine biology, and in his video you saw his nitrates would go above 100, and phosphates up to 5.0 at some point. He never had any problems, and is a 2 or 3x aquariast of the year. Flown all over the world to talk about what he knows.
_________
Carbonate and Bicarbonate are alkalinity, nutrients are separate (Ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, phosphate) -- But you get the idea! Dana Riddle also had a talk about this, I think he called it "supercharging photosynthesis", in which he found the perfect Alk / DKH was 9.0 as it gave the most photosynthesis and growth. BRS had their own experiment where they found 12 dkh to increase growth by over 60% (measured by coral weight) over 9 dkh.
I tried my Alk at 12, and I won't lie, my corals LOVED it. Growth and color was absurd. BUT, the moment something went wrong (my fault) that 12 alk became an instant liability to them. The only thing that didn't love it were a few mushrooms. Otherwise even my LPS didn't seem to mind at all.
There's a delicate balance of things, where several important factors intersect. Alkalinity, Lighting, Nutrients. You need to find your individual balance with these three elements. For some people it's easy, and for others it's not. One tank with a low alk and low light and high nutrients may brown out, same tank with higher lighting will color up.. But if light is too high for alk you'll get corals stressed out and burning. If alk is too high for nutrient level you'll get the same results. Etc etc etc.
These three things are the largest factor in reefing, to me, and some people can just find the balance by watching closely and connecting the dots, while others just keep struggling. I always refer to reefing as playing detective when it comes to finding out where your balance is, and what works for you, your system, and your type of reefing. You really do have to deconstruct things to give you that 'a ha' moment where it all clicks. And to do that, you must be vigilant to note all the little changes and their effects. This can be challenging, because I also tell people "Coral are like tree's, the rarely do anything quickly" -- So positive effects may take months to manifest, while negative effects are thankfully instant.
Right. Best we can do is try to find the goldilocks zone for our particular specimens we keep. And what we are striving for. I also know of @Dana Riddle 's 9ish dKh zone and I may push mine to 10 and keep the po4 around where it's at now, .18 ish hannah ulr. (See pic above)
I have ZERO sps at the moment, and besides some cheap 10$ live sale pieces I dont have any plans for sps until I can get a b-line on the right balance for my system.
Well it always gets more complicated and confusing, because lots of people have great success with tanks that don't register nutrients -- typically these are huge and established tanks with large fish, so they test at 0 but have some nutrients floating about.
It all works. I just think for the average person, especially newer to the hobby, having nutrients is a good thing. It's a buffer really, you can make a lot more mistakes when there's nutrients in tank.
@Rakie heres another shot of those acans we were talkin about..