Curtswearing
Mantisfreak
Over the course of the last 25 years I have seen a great many "methods" come and go, and then come and go yet again. After the initial "wow" factor has worn off, it all usualy goes back to just plain old basic husbandry skills and trying to emulate nature a bit better (DSBs, water changes, feeding and so on). There is no magical formula for good coral health and growth, You will get the same results of any "flavor of the month" method by providing the corals with what they recieve in the wild, which is good water quality, good lighting situations, and food.
And in 25 more years, it will boil down to this still. I've certainly not been doing this for 25 years but I'm amazed at some of the fads I've seen.
Even though someone mentioned 191 amino acids, Alina's research has found that only 16 (if my memory is correct) are "essential". All of the other ones are not utilized and essentially nutrients with no purpose. On a well-skimmed tank, this probably isn't that big of a deal. A good blender mush will break down into amino acids as well. I suspect that's why when I improved the ingredients in my mush, I got real good results as well. (You should have seen my 200g prop tank....it was a real good white trash hillbilly tank and I got amazing growth on my colonies and most of the tank was lit by PC's....yes you read that right...PC's). This is why I don't have a problem with people experimenting with AA's....it's just feeding in a chemical form. As long as you are careful and don't force the coral to grow too fast (therefore not putting down enough skeleton), I don't have a problem with it. I suppose it could be viewed as trying to perfect the food mixture.
BTW, for those who liked the study I posted earlier on the thread, here's more excellent articles by Alina Szmant on similar subjects.
Szmant, A. M. 2002. Nutrient enrichment on coral reefs: Is it a major cause of coral reef decline? Estuaries 25: 743-766.
Miller, M.W., E. Weil and A.M. Szmant. 2000. Recruitment patterns and grazing regime as factors structuring reef benthic communities in Biscayne National Park, USA. Coral Reefs 19: 115-123.
Szmant, A.M., E. Weil, M.W. Miller and D.E. Colón. 1997. Hybridization within the species complex of scleractinian coral Montastraea annularis. Marine Biology 129: 561-572.
Szmant, A.M. 1997. Nutrient effects on coral reefs: the importance of topographic and trophic complexity on nutrient dynamics. Proc. 8th Internat. Coral Reef Symp., Panama, June 1996. Vol. 2: 1527-1532.
Szmant, A. M., L. M. Ferrer, and L. M. FitzGerald. 1989. Nitrogen excretion and O:N ratios in reef corals: evidence for conservation of nitrogen. Marine Biology. 104: 119-127.
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