Yes but you have severly reduced the zoox population which in turn has reduced its compacity at producing those.
AA production with in the coral are very small, and additions of AA's to the water column will never make it to the corals directly. To many hungry mouths along the way. This is why I am stating its truely bacteria driven. If AA's are added to the water they will be bound up by bacteria immediately, now will the bacteria be delivered to the coral or live with in the coral?? I would say that is the result.
To be exactly the same I am not sure, depend on the enviroment the coral came from. When dealing with reef top and very low concentrations of nutrients you are dealing with corals that are subject to a lot of inputs of nutrients both organic and inorganic but then are quickly swept away by tides and wave action. Kinda like feeding a bg meal and then quickly cleaning up the table after dinner, lol. I think when relating to the zeovit system and comparing it to this it is more of a function of the skimming capability (carbon maybe to) but that would be a key.
The reason I asked you about the slime on the corals, is that it is a major form of the way they gather food. In the case of the zeosystem you are negating or severly reducing other aspects and reling on the consumption of bacteria, slime netting is the main way they take up bacteria. If your corals are producing good amounts of slime then one can assume that they are making the transistion to actively feed in this manner. Which is what you really want to see.
Mike