A brief summary- The system is about 285g of water volume (180 g display, 55g fuge, 100g sump). The tank was set up in 2003. Had sps with good success for 5-6 years. My circumstances changed and couldn’t keep up with the sps regimen. So it then was a softie tank for about a decade with a very high bioload. Last couple of years has been FO with just a couple softies. I did very few water changes over the past couple years.
Now I want to return to sps but I need to keep as low a maintenance time commitment as possible. Testing for phosphate and nitrates was off the charts a few months ago - not a surprise. I took out all of my sand, all corals but 2 small softies and a RBTA and went bare bottom. Cut the fish load by about 50% by mass, although perhaps it may still be on the high side (currently 3 tangs avg size 4”, 2 small clowns, 2 wrasses 3”, flame hawk 3”, and 1 angelfish 8”. Put in roller mat. Stocked the refuge with three softball size chaeto clumps and a fist size clump of caulerpa. The chaeto has not grown much, while the caulerpa has about doubled. And started doing water changes of course. Over the last month 40g water change per week. Started a carbon reactor and GFO last week. I started a bit lower than the recommended dose and used 10 tbsp.
Sent ICP test prior to the above : PO4 = 1.879 ppm. Yikes! Now 1.411 ppm, better but still insanely high.
I’ve sent out nitrate test to the lab also, and I expect that will be extremely high as well.
Where to go from here? I don’t think water changes are going to be enough - the live rock might have a lot of retained phosphate over the years? Throwing out the rock is something I would not want to do as I suspect that would destroy my biome and I like my aquascape.
I used on online calculator that said I’d need 1500 ml (or 102 tbsp) of RowaPhos to go from 1.411 to 0.02ppm. Obviously that can’t be done in one dose.
I’ve never heard of levels this high and this is just the PO4. There’s no way I can start sps until I’m back in the safe range.
Please advise -—max safe dose of GFO or RowaPhos ? How often to change that out in this situation? Weekly?
Start nopox ? Microbacter 7? Other?
Now I want to return to sps but I need to keep as low a maintenance time commitment as possible. Testing for phosphate and nitrates was off the charts a few months ago - not a surprise. I took out all of my sand, all corals but 2 small softies and a RBTA and went bare bottom. Cut the fish load by about 50% by mass, although perhaps it may still be on the high side (currently 3 tangs avg size 4”, 2 small clowns, 2 wrasses 3”, flame hawk 3”, and 1 angelfish 8”. Put in roller mat. Stocked the refuge with three softball size chaeto clumps and a fist size clump of caulerpa. The chaeto has not grown much, while the caulerpa has about doubled. And started doing water changes of course. Over the last month 40g water change per week. Started a carbon reactor and GFO last week. I started a bit lower than the recommended dose and used 10 tbsp.
Sent ICP test prior to the above : PO4 = 1.879 ppm. Yikes! Now 1.411 ppm, better but still insanely high.
I’ve sent out nitrate test to the lab also, and I expect that will be extremely high as well.
Where to go from here? I don’t think water changes are going to be enough - the live rock might have a lot of retained phosphate over the years? Throwing out the rock is something I would not want to do as I suspect that would destroy my biome and I like my aquascape.
I used on online calculator that said I’d need 1500 ml (or 102 tbsp) of RowaPhos to go from 1.411 to 0.02ppm. Obviously that can’t be done in one dose.
I’ve never heard of levels this high and this is just the PO4. There’s no way I can start sps until I’m back in the safe range.
Please advise -—max safe dose of GFO or RowaPhos ? How often to change that out in this situation? Weekly?
Start nopox ? Microbacter 7? Other?