Yeah if you happen to have an algal bloom but that would also likely depend on where your nutrient levels areHelps prevent green water
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Yeah if you happen to have an algal bloom but that would also likely depend on where your nutrient levels areHelps prevent green water
Randy, exactly…just an observation and I’m in no way claiming anything in my statement. The only reason I posted my personal observations with ORP was as the OP had asked about declining ORP and others experiences. I referenced the change when replacing the lamp after two years as it may imply that the lamps lose some potency over time and suggests to me that the UV does something. For me, the only conclusion I can draw from my experience is that I clean my glass less frequently with uv than without. As far as anything else, meh. I have had a mixed reef from about 1995-2018 without uv (without about 90% of everything I currently have actually. Only Kalk, skimmer, filter floss, t5’s, IO salt and water changes) which was successful. In 2019 I started a new system with all the gadgets and hyped methods (bare bottom, trace elements, ulns, fuge, uv, led/t5, roller mat, ICP, TM Salt, dosing nitrate and phosphate, blah, blah, blah) and more than struggled for over a year. My theory is this, do not drink the kool-aid. You can be very successful without all the bologna. If you want to be a gear head and try all the hype, go for it. It can be fun and challenging but it is in no way necessary.I know you aren't claiming it, and are just making an observation, but I would not equate the ORP rise (or fall) with desirability. ORP changes have pros and cons and the old adage that higher ORP means better water is, IMO, not accurate.
Ok...I might check it out...I do recognize the positive aspects of UV but as discussed in the thread I'm also aware of the negative effects as wellSince you are in Bangkok you should look at @JMacedo and his Reef on the 10th floor. He uses UV to great effect and can tell you why. I visited with him and witnessed his amazing aquarium.
Aquabiomics's research was actually one of my sources when I was looking into the effects!I believe Aquabiomics sum it wonderfully
How does a UV sterilizer affect the microbiome?
Microbiome testing for aquariums and aquacultureaquabiomics.com
They are also in the business of selling “micro biome testing” service. It’s a little bit like having an oil company research the effects of solar panels on ambient air temperature. I don’t see any data. No growth measurements with or without UV. Just one metric, in a vacuum, without any context. Would love to see more.I believe Aquabiomics sum it wonderfully
How does a UV sterilizer affect the microbiome?
Microbiome testing for aquariums and aquacultureaquabiomics.com
There actually is a video I can link for you to watch but the information you'd be interested in is right in the middle of an hour and a half long video...btw, it doesn't help their business for the tanks they're testing to be more or less diverse in terms of free swimming bacteria (the bacterial strains primarily killed by UV) so you're analogy doesn't apply so wellThey are also in the business of selling “micro biome testing” service. It’s a little bit like having an oil company research the effects of solar panels on ambient air temperature. I don’t see any data. No growth measurements with or without UV. Just one metric, in a vacuum, without any context. Would love to see more.
Nice! Are you running a lower flow for parasites or higher flow for algae. I’d enjoy hearing what you do to to have such clean glass. Thx!!Recently moved to a bigger tank. Cycling over the last few months. Livestock transfer over the last few weeks. Just moved the UV over on May 4.
Anecdotally went from cleaning glass daily/ every other day to once per week.
Has anyone actually measured a change in pelagic bacteria population size with and without UVC irradiation?No, UV doesn't differentiate between bacterial strains...it kills whatever bacterial pass through it. You're correct in saying that most of the nitrifying bacteria live on surfaces but there are many bacteria that live in the water column which UV sterilizers kill. These are the bacterioplankton that corals capture and use for a portion of their nutritional requirements.
Has anyone actually measured a change in pelagic bacteria population size with and without UVC irradiation?
UVC effect might be a placebo if the flow rate is not set and maintained correctly.
Except for a possible lower number (see first question) would coral care whether they ate dead, dying or live bacteria?
@Timfish
What do you think about UV in a reef tank? Beneficial or more detrimental to corals? What does the research say?