wave98
Pearly
.3 phosphate, 20 nitrate, - - lots of crabs and snails > no algae ( still working on the nitrate )
DonW said:What I find odd is that we take purified water, put it in a big trash can then we add salt, P and what ever else is it that bucket we got at the LFS. Having a spare canister filter with carbon and rowa/phosban to be used as the mixing pump does a good job of removing the unwanted junk from the salt mix.
Don
DonW said:Just remember they have a in hole and a out hole thus supplimenting new algae growth. You still need to get it out to the sewer.
Don
Woodstock said:Hummm... I think algae is more prevelant in newer tanks for several reasons. Since most sand & rock is loaded with nutrients and even the newly made salt water has some levels of ammonia/phosphates; these nutrients, along with the fact that most newer tanks don't have any organisms (corals, macro algae, bacteria, etc) yet to absorb them, creates a great nursery for the quick growing micro algeas to thrive. With a little time, more competiion, heavy skimming/diterus removal, and the continued use of ro/di will slowly lower the nutrient levels and starve out the micro nusiance algaes.
gman0526 said:On new setups other than overfeeding by new hobbyists, I think that the misconception of the term "cured rock" given by LFS/vendors to their product, in my opinion all newlly purchased rock should be quarantined and "recycled" b4 being placed in the tank. Not to mention the array of unnecessary chemical products newbies are sold by LFS that wreak havoc on the stability of a new system.
wave98 said:. I have a 27 gal. hex tank with 6" of substrate on a plenum and a very high bioload. I am jumping on with Jiddy here regarding snails and crabs. Phosphate is at .3 and nitrate at 20 ppm. I am running 96 watt pc's which is a lot shy for the "sps", but "boy" can they grow a lot of algae!
wave98 said:. Now I realize that snails and crabs have two holes, and this quite obviously why I am having to fight a bit with P and nitrate
wave98 said:MikeS:
Thanks for your reply.
. I agree with you entirely about the lights and the nutrients. I was only saying that they are less than adequate for the sps in the tank, and that the tremendous and immediate reduction of hair algae in the tank was from the crabs and snails, and not from any lack of light.
wave98 said:. My skimming is very poor but not nonexistant with my crummy "seaclone" which be replaced fairly soon, and my 450 gph in the main tank is just swirling around in the walmart tub below with an old rock and an inch of arragonite that I just happened to have left over.
wave98 said:. My real interest here is in building the refugium and what substrate( or sand etc.) I should use there as well as the macroalgaes that are safest to grow and will promote "pod production" to use for food. Maybe I could throw some in the garbage every once in a while or give it away and get a bit of nutrient reduction "to boot".
wave98 said:. By the way Mike, I noticed that you are looking into substrates for your new aquarium and plenum. You are right about the anoxic zone, which is of the most benefit in a plenum system, whereas the anearobic zone is where the real nasties come from like cyanobacteria and sulfides.
wave98 said:. You don't need that coarse of a gravel to do this however. Waterflow in the column isn't going to do it for you in the substrtate till you hit about 8mm,
and then it's not a plenum anymore anyway. 1.7 to 3mm will do well in the 6 inches you're talking about, and with good flow in the column you won't collect hardly any detritus there either. Just add some small snails and crabs and you won't collect any detritus at the "sand-gravel" surface.
Jiddy said:Sorry, i havent read this last few big post, i get headaches, lol, so if this has already been mentions, opps sorry
Isnt saying that snails dont solve your algae problem like saying, mowing your yard doesnt solve your grass problem?
Just curious cuz good old Gary M is tryin to flame me on RC about snails over the internet and nows hes pullin rabbits out his hat
Woodstock said:The key word is "export" not 'recycle'. If you followed every snail around and cleaned it's poopie immediately, then tehy would serve as an export; otherwise they are only recycling (changing the form of the nitrAte/po4 from green to brown ). Yes, they are eating/removing the algae but their poopie, if not removed quickly, will simply disolve and feed the next generation of algae.
NaH2O said:Reducing our phosphate inputs is one method to help control algae. What do you think are big phosphate inputs?
NaH2O said:Scooterman - hope you're hanging in there with the weather!!!
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