Hi Nikki, This will sound like a BB VS Substrate "spark or spear", but it isn't. I am really just curious.
NaH2O said:
Here's another question I'd like some opinions on, as I think it pertains to my tank. We've all been told to go slow with a reef tank...slow is better. Can you go too slow? Would not providing enough competition for the algae allow it to grow crazy? I went slow with my tank.....really slow - one fish at a time, no corals, yet I had uncontrollable algae. Granted, I had my skimmer break mid cycle/curing rock, so I had more nutrients than I would have liked for 2 months before a new skimmer was sent out. But, it has been proposed to me that I went too slow, so the algae was able to take hold due to lack of any significant competition (no corals, one fish, snails - in a 120)?
Uncontrolable algae heh? How many snails, and "no crabs"? What do you mean by "competition"? Are you talking about competition for the Nitrate and P, like Xenias, clams, algae ( micro, macro ), corals, or something else? :?:
Yeah, I missed it ( sorry ), are you running BB, or substrate? Anyway, going slow does not avoid Nitrate, and how you avoid ( process ) nitrate differs between BB and substrate systems.
The skimmer breakdown would be especially problematic for BB. This sounds like a BB. ( and no crabs? ) The tank is going to work out fine regardless. Actually, if you can keep the algae from blooming, to the point of creating it's own little microcosism on the "surfaces" ( whatever they are ), then at least whatever else is competing for that surface has a better chance. :idea:
Going slow, would probably pertain more to a reef tank that was using substrate, I would think, and by all means, chew up the algae with crabs and snails, so you can get it to that skimmer that broke down ( or better yet, the one that didn't )! Your flow here?
Well, that's my 13 cents, and it's only an opinion. In the long run it shouldn't make much difference, ecpecially for BB.
Happy reef keeping! > Wave98