mojoreef said:
Collin you are comparing Racemose with the most toxic form of Caulerpa out their, so the 80X looks pretty good, but perhaps we should just look at the amount released by the caulerpas we are talking about.
Yes, exactly. Many studies have been done on the amount of toxin contained by C. taxifolia and then studies were done to ascertain how toxic the CYN isolated from the taxifolia extract is. Racemose has 80x less CYN than taxifolia and Prolifera even less than that. By doing this we can, to at least some degree extrapolate the relative toxicity by comparison. It would be expected to be about 80 times less.
On the studies they were not all related to organisms that were eating the caulerpa. various forms of larva and planktonic life forms has nothing to do with eating, just general vicinity. The toxin is definalty released as a defensive measure, but the breaking of the plant is not required, it leaches all on its own. Remember caulerpas are competitors and very aggressive at doing so.
Yes, the toxin is released from the leaves even without being broken. However, some of the studies you referenced to me showed that the toxin concentration is at a maximum (called 100%) at the very border of the leaf. The concentration then falls off rapidly such that within a very short distance, it falls to zero. The CYN toxin is very shortlived in seawater. Kinetic studies were performed to understand it breakdown. The rate study showed nearly perfect 1st order kinetic laws. From this we can understand how long it takes the toxin to degrade by being exposed to naked sea water.
So. Here is a few graphs to illustrate, taken from some of the references you quoted:
So, lets do some back of the envelope calculations. C. Taxifolia has, at max at the height of its toxin in Autum I believe, 2% by dry weight CYN. Lets assume that a regufium has about 1 oz or 1/16 of a lb of prolifica in it. Lets also assume a 100 gallon aquarium with seawater at 8 lbs/gallon. So, if the taxifolia released ALL of its toxin instantaneously the concentration in the water would be:
(1/16)*0.02/(100*8)= 0.0625/800=0.000078 = 1.6 ppm
Now Racemosa has 80x less so this would equate to about:
0.02 ppm or 20 ppb of CYN if all was Racemose CYN was released instantaneously into a 100 gallon tank.
Now lets refer to the chart above. Growth rates do not become negative until being soaked for 2 weeks at 250 ug/ml which is 250 ppm. At 0.02 ppm, we are right next to the control. Thus we are far from the rate at which growth rates are affected significantly. Now, that being said the caulerpas so have other toxins other than CYN, so lets multiply by 100 just to be safe. Even then we are at only 2 ppm. I think this is very conservative, or in other words...overkill.
So the next argument is probably, but we are in a closed system so it will buildup over time and get higher? Let's address that. To re-interate, even if everything was released instantaneously (which is far from correct) we are nowhere near toxic levels. However, lets even assume that something like 1% of this amount is released on some continuous basis.
Now, another set of charts:
please look at the upper left hand chart. This is a chart of the time decay of the toxin in seawater that I refered to earlier that exhibits nearly perfect 1st order kinetics. From this chart we can see that a given concentration of CYN will degrade to effectively zero within 24 hours. From these two sets of data, I could actually calculate the equilibrium steady state concentration of CYN in the aquarium. I have done such pharmokinetic calculations many times in my career. Such calculations are beyond the scope of this discussion, however, suffice it to say that the equilibrium concentration will not come close to exceeding that of an instantaneous release of all the toxins at once. It will be more like 5% of that number of ballpark around 0.1 ppm which is 100 ppb...very very low.
Thus it can be seen that prolifera or racemosa will not provide enough toxin into the tank to stunt growth at steady state or even the instantaneous release of all toxin. Now if a caulerpa continually brushes up on a coral, I might buy that it is somewhat affected (but I'll barely buy that).
So, I have done what you suggested. Roughly quantified the amount of CYN capable of being introduced, in a worst case scenario, into at reef tank and compared it to published toxicology information.
Now, I am even more convinced that my theoretical rambling is in the ballpark.
Also just some trivia, vitamin A is necessary for us to live. However, at too high of a dose it is toxic. This shows that at low levels, some "toxins" can either be beneficial or a non-event.
Similarly, qur drinking water if full of "toxins" however, the EPA regulates the amounts that can be present such that our metabolisms can handle them without problem. I find it hard to believe that low levels of CYN can really be a problem. Like I said. My Prolifera is FULL of life. Stuff even grows right on the fronds themselves.
Nope not really, its more to do with enviromental conditions. Every critter from corals to algae with thrive if the conditions are correct. So if you have a pristine reef with low nutrients and thriving corals that is all of a sudden subjected to a nutrient load the enviroment has been skewed and now it is more to the liking of algaes.
again, a chicken and egg. If the corals get nutrient loaded water for a long enough time, they are sick anyway. At that point the algea will invade. However, they are likely already in decline. However, I agree. Caulerpa does not belong next to corals in a mini-reef or real reef.
I would say the most common was nutrient fluxes. High original fluxes allowed for excellerated growth and over population. Once the food source was greatly deprecated the caulerpa crashed. Second most common was lighting. Not so much the 24/7 as much as the caulerpa that was under the canopy of caulerpa crashed. there are a lot of reasons, some more common then others
OK, why were the nutrient fluxes so high for a long enough time to let the caulerpa overgrow to such an extent without being pruned? This sounds like poor husbandry. We have to understand the needs of the organisms in the tank. If we don't feed our fish for a month, they will probably die also and poision the tank.
Absolutely!! but the caulerpa crash was but one more in the house of cards that multiplied the severeness of the crash. Kinda like a tank with a DSB,
If you build a system like it was a house of cards, it tends to have harder crashes and less chance of surviving events. Thats where a good skimmer can save your tank.
I don't buy the house of cards argument. If a tank crashes it crashes. Who can say it would survive with or without the algea. How can we make this conculsion?
mute point, although 24/7 lighting seems to be the safest bet, coupled with constant harvesting.
I agree completely.
In the case of an event it was just more fuel to the fire. In the case of close proximity it was stunted growth, not really any damage up to the point where the coral just bleached out.
So this doesn't sound so severe really.
Mostly racemose, feather was another big one.
Racmose, as you pointed out, is nearly as aggressive as taxifolia from a growth rate perspective and has a much larger tendency for going sexual than prolifera.
Agreed for sure. When a person is selecting an algae to use as an export medium they should take alot of things into consideration. Amount exported, toxicity, potentcal for going sexual and so on. If they are just looking for a pure bulk remover I would suggest cyanobacter as it uptakes 500x more then your best caulerpa, hairs is also better, xynia is way up their to. Oh and I wouldn't keep a cucumber either, just got to much invested in the tank and my luck really sucks.
Again it becomes a why bother when their are better alternatives???
I'm just not convinced prolifera is a bad alternative. Maybe racemosa or some others are a little worse but still not an avalanche.
It shows that toxins are released with out any damage being done to the caulerpa.
Yes this is considered a fact.
ok try this one Lemée et al., 1997. heres a quote
all these studies were on the toxins that are shared amongst most all caulerpas
I don't think any of it is an exageration. Its just the other side of a particular method. One can still use caulerpas as a great nutrient absorber all we are saying is that their is a risk or a possibility that it may hurt your inhabitants. The choice is always the individuals. The risk goes up when the tank is full of more delicate species such as sps (who's defence against these toxins are not thier) and the risk lowers when the tanks is full os softies and lps that have a greater defence mechanism against simular chemicals thats all.
Cheato is a far better choice, so is Ulva (pods love nest).
take care
Mike
I just don't see that the caulerpas stack up that poorly. And also, the main point of all this is that there is no data showing that corals are even affected by this toxin. I'd say that there is a good chance if the concentration is high enough, but I just don't see how it could get to that stage unless you have A LOT of caulerpa and don't take proper care of it.
Best Regards...Collin