Tone
Active member
It is noticeable as well, that there is a general absence of coral
Paul, as a 'middle aged' reefer, I have thoroughly enjoyed many of your threads about how it used to be. LOL ! I do remember.
Thinking in reef aquaria seems to be drifting towards the importance of bacterial equilibrium ... each display being quite differently populated from one another due to micro-environmental and husbandry reasons. To my mind your tank reflects exactly that ... it is in balance just like many other tanks that run neither a skimmer nor frequent water changes.
I run a DSB in my 500G display comprising quite fine calcium carbonate aggregate. The strong water movement moves the top layer around and the Coris wrasse digs about in it constantly. This maintains the bed ... and being very deep in places keeps it operating. The added advantage is that the detritus is kept in suspension for my huge recirculating twin beckett skimmer to clean out and for the corals to trap.
However, for many reasons of good practise the RDSB for nitrate reduction is taking precedence. That allows the aquarist to easily disconnect the DSB for maintenance and replacement without impacting the operation of the display.
Paul, as a 'middle aged' reefer, I have thoroughly enjoyed many of your threads about how it used to be. LOL ! I do remember.
Thinking in reef aquaria seems to be drifting towards the importance of bacterial equilibrium ... each display being quite differently populated from one another due to micro-environmental and husbandry reasons. To my mind your tank reflects exactly that ... it is in balance just like many other tanks that run neither a skimmer nor frequent water changes.
I run a DSB in my 500G display comprising quite fine calcium carbonate aggregate. The strong water movement moves the top layer around and the Coris wrasse digs about in it constantly. This maintains the bed ... and being very deep in places keeps it operating. The added advantage is that the detritus is kept in suspension for my huge recirculating twin beckett skimmer to clean out and for the corals to trap.
However, for many reasons of good practise the RDSB for nitrate reduction is taking precedence. That allows the aquarist to easily disconnect the DSB for maintenance and replacement without impacting the operation of the display.