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These tanks are amazing to me. Nothing beats letting nature do what it was designed to do!
In recent years I gave begun doing the same thing with my tanks, though I'm not able to remove everything for an UG so I had to leave that out. What started as a reef display that required weekly water changes and constant dosing has evolved into a tank that I only have to feed and occasionally replenish elements. Acros don't like my lazy approach, but I can grow everything else like lightning.
I'm about to set up some propagation tubs for macroalgae, invertebrate propagation, and coral spawning, and I plan to mimic your method.
I'm curious, what ever happened to the sea apple mentioned in the first post? I've had similar success as you gave with the flame scallops and am always looking to test my luck haha.
Have a great day and God bless.
I consider this marine system fishless, because mollies are big amphipods.And the Word was made Flesh and dwelt amongst us.
@Dawn
I think one of the biggest reasons I can be passionate about reef keeping after 50 years is I see “Intelligent Design” in how everything is interconnected & interdependent. With recent research on the Coral Holibiont, it has become evident that coral & bacteria crosstalk to alter “gene expression“ to enhance their environment. As an observer of nature, I have come to embrace the concept of “less technology & more biology” and I strive to “emulate nature”. It brings me great joy to grow in tank live food as the “microbial loop” moves carbon up the food chain.
I continue Caribbean theme with addition of some deep water NPS Gorgonians.