stonycorals
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2006
- Messages
- 54
How do you support that position? It's pretty much the exact opposite of what you should strive for.
I support that position by simple logic and experience. Sure it'd be great to not have any swing whatsoever. However, naturally the pH swing as CO2 enters the water during night due to respiration and the absense of photosynthesis. During the day, it is the opposite, CO2 becomes depleted due to photosynthesis, especially when using any sort of refugium, or when the tank has abundance algae. This also occurs when the coral and clam stocking levels are high.
This assumes that you have limited gas exchange though. When aquarists have under powered skimmers, gas exchange is less than optimal and quite often resulting in pH fluctuations.
So what does the typical aquarist do then? They dump a lot of buffer into the tank that temporarily moves the pH, but causes swings in alkalinity, which IMHO is one param you don't want to fluctuate. Then starts the battle to maintain alkalinity, calcium, and magnesium levels as the aquarist sees the calcium go down due to adding all that buffer to increase the pH. But Calcium isn't the only ion to precipitate as a salt of carbonate, magensium does as well.
The pH of reefs also fluctuate due to the photosynthesis cycle, but it's not as extreme. Why? Because God isn't dumping buffers into the reefs to get the pH up. There is a natural pH fluctuation in our tanks and on the reefs.
Now, if you want a stable pH (meaning less than .2 daily fluctuation), you have two options, that do not involve adding any buffers/chemicals to our tanks. First, add a refugia, I've not run one, but since the pH fluctuation is cause by photosynthesis, put the refugia on a reverse cycle and this should do it. I'm saying should because I've not used a refugia before. The second, and one that I've had many years experience with, is using a good skimmer that provides excellent gas exchange. I've used downdrafts for many, many years and my pH does not move, it stays at 8.1. I know needlewheels are popular, but they simply do not process enough water to provide that level of gas exchange.
pH is one of those params, like temperature, that the hobbyist is convinced that they must be stable. Of course, there are a bazillion of buffer products out there that promises to maintain a pH level of 8.3 if you add so much of it, but your fighting a natural cycle. If you look to the reefs, there are natural, daily fluctuations. I'm more concerned about maintaining a stable alkalinity level than anything else.