Ya ya nice try
Water changes are great for dilluting pollution in the water column but I dont see how thier going to touch anything in the Sandbed.
Actually this is not unknown, especially in the natural environment, my concern is what is doing it in the closed systems, and why has it not turned toxic in DSBs???
Blue I dont think Sulfur really comes into play until the bed is greatly disturbed, its just another one of thoses things that sinks.
YOu do a phosphate test on the sand bed yet????
You know the deeper and deeper I keep looking into this filtration system the more it scares me.
I will go look at your non echinata now
Well I dont know, lol. Were pretty much guessing at that point. From what I do know is that it is possible for sure, But a wholes series of things would have to happen perfectly for it to come true...kindaThe coral uptakes these elements into it's tissue, where it can manipulate those with a lower in-body pH, effectively forming calcite. Am I wrong?
Yep that is true but macros should have about the same effect, but in reality most macros play the same chemical game also so its six of one or a half a dozen of the other, if you went with softies or macros to uptake.Now, I'm not saying that ALL sulfates, ammonium, and citrates (still confused as to what these are) are uptaken, but trying to state that IF they ARE prevalent on a regular basis, then a few softies in the tank would help to keep them under control for longer than a tank w/ no softies.
Got one of those, sometimes she even brings home a six pack after a hard days work, her name is Rocio...the best thing going and will cook ya dinner to.
In the refugium I would only put in about and 1 1/2 of sand in thier. This will stay mostly aerobic and have a small portion of it as anerobic. This will help with bug and larvae growth and give you some nutrient export.
And if it gets plugged down the line a simple syphon once again will take care of your problems.Okay this supports what I have read here and elsewhere, and is what I had planned for the refugium.
Umm...what sort of symptoms does a plugged sand bed exhibit??? Higher phospahte levels? To "unplug" my sand bed, are you talking about basically gravel washing, or actual physical removal, rinsing, (thereby killing everything in it??) and replacing it?
I had thought about setting up twin inline refugiums of 10 gallons or so, which would allow me to remove one for cleaning, (if necessary) and keep the other online for nutrient export etc...Just out of curiousity Mike, what do you use for your bilogical filtration?? Just the LR and macro's???
Most of the ones I have seen that have gone down showed the following. Phosphates that could be gotten rid of (this is shown as patch hair algae and cyano that appears in dfferent locations constantly until the food source is gone then it shows up in other locations) basically a never ending war with nuisence algae. Also the loss of the anerobic and aerobic zones. As the anoxic zone fills with stuff it cant process it rises, as it rises the upper zone shrink.Umm...what sort of symptoms does a plugged sand bed exhibit??? Higher phospahte levels? To "unplug" my sand bed, are you talking about basically gravel washing, or actual physical removal, rinsing, (thereby killing everything in it??) and replacing it?
You can do this no problem bud but really if you maintain it with syphoning once a month or so you dont need to take one off line. For filtration I use Live rock and a big skimmer and alot of flow. Remember a DSB is its own bioload and puts alot of filtration demands on your system in itself.I had thought about setting up twin inline refugiums of 10 gallons or so, which would allow me to remove one for cleaning, (if necessary) and keep the other online for nutrient export etc...Just out of curiousity Mike, what do you use for your bilogical filtration?? Just the LR and macro's???
Boy Oh Boy and the guys quotes himself
Enter your email address to join:
Register today and take advantage of membership benefits.
Enter your email address to join: