Aaaaahhhhhhhhh, I see some of you took a bite as I thought you would. I still see that a lot of the answers and reasoning you are using are common logical deduction, but it was exactly my point that there is no substantial scientific evidence to back it up.
I am yet to see or heard of the first scientific analysis of skimmate. I do agree that that dark, muddy, and quite stinky substance taken out of the water can't possibly be good for anything, but that is based on the fact that I don't like dark, muddy, and stinky substances and not on research showing that such things are composed of XYZ and that they are detrimental to corals. How are they detrimental? Someone took corals ABC and exposed one to the skimmate in the water, one to nothing, and one to different degrees/amounts of skimmate and showed that over X period of time growth was stunted, there was less zoxanthele production, that they metabolism was affected, etc. See what I am getting at here? Until then it remains to be hearsay.
Same goes for the lighting. All the arguments some of you have made are quite possibly true. They sound good to me also, but there is nothing that has shown convincibly those arguments. I may be wrong and I would love to read something that proves me wrong. It is not a spitting contest, but I also would like to learn if someone shows me differently. I am not that smart afterall.
I couldn't agree more with the person that said all we can agree on is that they need water and salt :lol: :lol:
Mike:
You have some valid arguments, but my point was not to prove or disprove theories. Rather, it was to bring out the question of: Is what I hear as true actually true or just someone's answer he heard more than once and took it as being true? I guess I made you type a lot anyway :lol: :lol:
I am yet to see or heard of the first scientific analysis of skimmate. I do agree that that dark, muddy, and quite stinky substance taken out of the water can't possibly be good for anything, but that is based on the fact that I don't like dark, muddy, and stinky substances and not on research showing that such things are composed of XYZ and that they are detrimental to corals. How are they detrimental? Someone took corals ABC and exposed one to the skimmate in the water, one to nothing, and one to different degrees/amounts of skimmate and showed that over X period of time growth was stunted, there was less zoxanthele production, that they metabolism was affected, etc. See what I am getting at here? Until then it remains to be hearsay.
Same goes for the lighting. All the arguments some of you have made are quite possibly true. They sound good to me also, but there is nothing that has shown convincibly those arguments. I may be wrong and I would love to read something that proves me wrong. It is not a spitting contest, but I also would like to learn if someone shows me differently. I am not that smart afterall.
I couldn't agree more with the person that said all we can agree on is that they need water and salt :lol: :lol:
Mike:
You have some valid arguments, but my point was not to prove or disprove theories. Rather, it was to bring out the question of: Is what I hear as true actually true or just someone's answer he heard more than once and took it as being true? I guess I made you type a lot anyway :lol: :lol: