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His tank is actually very healthy. He doesn't have a jungle of corals but
the ones he has placed are doing very well. I wish he had a pic of it on his site. B "Steve" wrote in message ... On Sat, 08 Jul 2006 04:40:02 GMT, "Bryan" wrote: A pet store near me has an awesome show tank with no coralline on any of the glass. On my way out a month back I asked him how he does it. He said something to the effect that his multiple clams and other calcium absorbing species and rocks keep the glass clean for him. I need to go back and clarify but I thought I'd give you his info. If you run a tank that is calcium deficient the corallines stop growing before the corals do. A lot of calcium users kept in a system with inadequate calcium addition will produce exactly this effect. There is detail on this in Delbeek and Sprung Vol 3. Steve |
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On Sat, 08 Jul 2006 16:19:12 GMT, "Bryan" wrote:
His tank is actually very healthy. He doesn't have a jungle of corals but the ones he has placed are doing very well. I wish he had a pic of it on his site. Yes the corals can be healthy and growing despite sub-optimal calcium, I've done this myself, and had tanks with corals doing OK despite no coralline at all. It just strikes me as a bit odd intentionally keeping SPS corals in water with less than sea water Ca concentrations, somehow I enjoy striving to replicate nature, and think it's a good general principle. And I wonder a little about what the margin of safety is in those tanks I suppose, how do you guarantee your Ca stays stable at that 300ish no coralline level, or just dives at some point, unless you have a buffer zone above minimum requirements. Maybe I'm taking a simplistic approach, I just see reefkeeping as trying to replicate NSW and maybe that's old-fashioned. Hey, I measured my Ca last night out of curiosity, 380, could do better IMHO. Acropora and a Tubastraea (that we recently brought back from near death ex dealer) look happy though, me I'd like to see 400 in there if I do get in a numbers mood :-). Steve |
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