jlehigh said:
There was a study/analysis on the nutrient contents found within macros, Xenia, and skimmer slop. I never keep these darn studie so I'm sorry I have no reference.. it was essentially a skimate analysis. Skimmers were by far and large a more efficient means of export however one could take the measurments from the study and figure the volumes of live export methods and make them proportionate to the skimmer... Difficult to get this thought down clearly...
I would love to read this if you can find it or at least point me in the right direction, for I have never run across anything like that.
I'll tell you my take on refugiums and why I don't have nor want one.
First of, I truly believe that anything we do in our tanks should have a good purpose/function otherwise we are waisting time, effort, and energy. Despite what most people think or say, the only thing I see a refugium good for is nitrate reduction. Macro hardly takes any PO4 at all, so for that purpose it does not work. What else that is good or bad in the water that it may take is unknown to most of us. At least to the extent of my humble knowledge. Some people say they have them for pod procreation and to feed the fish in your main display tank. Not so really. Most, if not all, amphipods, copepods, and other "bugs" are not water born. They are crawlers wondering around on the substrate and rock, but mostly rock. So, having a million of them in your refugium increases the population in the tank to almost non-existant. So, if you really want to increase the pod population in your tank for some of the live food hungry fish, you would be so much better served by putting some rubble piles inside your tank. They will become a breeding ground for these "bugs" and fish cannot get to them directly. If you think I am wrong, wait untilt he lights go out on your tank and go look in your main tank with a flashlight. Then, count how many free swimming pods you see all over your water.
Refugiums can also be plenty harmfull. See a bunch of macro that went asexual and you'll see what I am talking about. They also produce some toxic materials that we all hope are taken out by the skimmer and carbon, but nobody really knows. The macro is also like any plant and sheds some branches and "leaves" into the water or substrate. If you don't remove it they rot defeating the purpose of why you had them in the first place. Add that to a sand bed there and you now have a rotting sponge.
I had one in my previous tank. It was a good way of adding 100g to the system (550g), it soaked up lots of nitrates fromt he large population of fish I had, but it also was a lot of work. One thing I did not realize was the large amounts of decomposing materials a refugium can produce until I tore it up. THe refugium had been on for a year. All I ever put there was 100 Lb or so of LR and some macro. Lights were on 24/7 and it did grow a ton of it. As a matter of fact, I removed about 1/3-1/2 of a IO bucket every 2-3 weeks. When I tore up the refugium, there was a 3" deep layer of mud at the bottom. Where did it come from? Take a guess.
I decided I would not put a refugium this time around as I have a bare bottom tank and have a very low bioload from fish. I do a lot of other things now too.
One thing refugiums are great for in the other hand is to have a completely different population of fish and such that you cannot have in the main tank. For example, you would love to have sea horses and pipe fish but you also ahve much bigger fish that will harass and compete for food with the them. You can turn the refugium in a nice home for them without having to double up on equipment or setting up another system altogether. For this alone it can be extremely rewarding. Also, it can another place where to put some new fish to fatten them up before introduction to the main display. It will allow the fish to have no competition for food and develop some good eating/feeding habit if it was a very picky eater. Once put in the main display, it is in the same water (no further acclimation). However, this is no quarintne as any disease the new fish brought in it will spread in the same water.
OK, flame me well..............