this is nearly five years old and was slowly added during the first two years, it doesn't sound as stable to pile it all in at once although with 100% water changes it doesn't surprise me in the least if it works.
montiporas
hydnophoras
acansXlordhowe and echinata
lobophyllia
xenia but was removed off the glass last month, through with it after as many years it shades others too much
galaxea fascicularis
ric florida
caulastrea
plus what you wrote
red goniopora, removed after one months as truly the only risky allelopathic stony coral kept. No other genera outwardly affected the other frags, they started to recede from the entry of one tiny frag I made of it. pic shown
all other species have been in there long enough to show their true ability to adapt, the only recession Im getting is the blastomussas stinging the echinata red variant and also I don't target feed as much as I used to because of RC FPV remote control airplanes=new addiction. the goal is not to prune a lot unless something will wreck the tank, its to see what adaptability really means.
youtube comments is where I can always be found if you want pico reef talk and I miss it here, but i will mark this thread and hang out. someone go to wal mart and get the two gallon vase (down to 1 after sand and rock displacement) four pounds of live rock (yes) and some caribsea live sand that is wet packaged. rather than debate specifics, I always say if you want what I have do what I did. don't use live sand from an established tank, its a pre-nutrient store. its one way that's possible, just not the best idea for vases that will try to prevent oversaturation of the bed by the coupled feeding/water change technique critical to success. You have the option of changing water out in small amounts regularly, or all of it on sundays, both work. once a week is easiest, and for most waste export.
This tank will be dosed with C balance, micronutrients are never an issue. The reason pico reefs don't have coralline problems like mine is because water changes only support so much coralline, to get it to look like jim morrison's beard you have to dose for it.
the total weekly routine is:
sunday change water with reef crystals
monday dose ~1/4 capfull of c balance yellow bottle in the morning into the vase before lights on, never after lights off on either doser. ten minutes later dose the 1/4 capfull of blue bottle C balance. a firm rule is morning dosing, death will follow if you add in the afternoon. The reason these dosing don't have to be exact is because even up to a half cap is below the precipitation and pH thresholds within a gallon tank. use only c-balance, if you do other dosers its your own experiment...
tuesday do nothing watch tank
wed same dosing scheme, maybe topoff a bit if the water line dropped a sixteenth of an inch.
thurs do nothing, maybe play around with the aquascaping till you like it
friday dosing day
sat topoff
sun repeat!
I personally guarantee you the repeatability will exceed any other reef system (lol guy with a gallon says that). We can document it here or on the tube, Id say there are about 10 out there now running based on pm's and emails. KevinStan on nanoreef, Mark (Warlion) on youtube are two tops.
Check out Warlion's thread on here and on youtube, pico reef vase. a reefbowl recreation done via youtube comments along with the master fab skills of someone who is naturally gifted at tank design, he figured out how to drill the vase which is far better than my method. My topoff requirement at this gallon tank is one ounce every 2-3 days, Mark gets 5 freakin days on topoff, via partial sealing, not hamster bottling lol
http://www.flickr.com/photos/27804644@N03/4333633404/in/photostream/
what you are seeing is the vette of pico reefs, you start with a yugo and work up in the same container.
google "the history of pico reef biology" for specifics on this vase
the same design first guessed at was totally lucky, and did not have to be adjusted. Because of evaporation restriction, it makes up for the fact the footprint is the size of a coffee cup and you could elbow it over any second lol
just took some snaps of live rock growth, filter feeder stands numbering in the hundreds too Id assume, the live rock growth is not slick coralline, its stubbly coralline and worms and sponges because constant water changes with high feeding just before keep suspended nutrients high and dissolved nutrients (the algae food) low. this is just one way that works, others choose to do daily small changes and that's ok too. my way is just the least possible work with the highest possible return after nine years of keeping them. here's a vid of my scraping dubious coralline growth with a coat hanger rod. how many other gallon pico reefs do you know have to do this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3onG2SvzKc
and here's a long video (like my long posts lol) to show nearly every tank Ive done
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_XOsitYhihc
B