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The chill lagoon


Full Hedge
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On 1/16/2018 at 1:57 AM, Full Hedge said:

I stopped using aminos and reef energy A.

Getting better colouration.

My kit kat acro (acropora abrotanoides) developing green on the tips.

Nitrates consistently 0. Phosphates <0.03

 

You mean you stop amino and reef energy A dosing and your livestock color is better?

6.5 * 2 * 2 + 3.75 * 1.5 *1.5,(Decomn on 14/9/08)
4*2*2 + 2.5*1.25*1.25 (Decomn on 1/8/09)
5*2*2 (Fully LED light system, 140 3 watt SSC leds with 60 degree lens)(Decomm)
2.5*2*2(Fully LED Light System,96 3 watt SSC leds with 60 degree lens)(Decomm)

5*2.5*2(LED only)

Eheim return 1 * pump

1 HP Daikin compressor with cooling coil
2 Jebao OW40, 1 ecotech MP40,
1X6085 Tunze wm,

1 CURVE 7 Skimmer

  1 DIY 80 led control by Bluefish mini 

1 radion XR30W G2, 2 Radion XR15G3

Sump area lite by 5 ft T5 , 6 * SSC 3 watt red LED for refugium

1 Full spectrum E27 led light

1 CR control by bubble count

Start No Water Change since 1st Dec 2016

Add new 2.5x2x 1.5 ft 

 nLekOfpYts.jpg
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Sea doesn't have high nitrates so keeping low nitrates is actually more accurately representing the natural environment. Thereafter it'll depend on whether the coral can get enough ` food` from just photosynthesis. Rest of the requirements r trace elements. If dosing food actually seems better then prob the corals on hand prefer clean water.

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1 hour ago, Komerider said:

Usually about 1. Can't be zero cos nitrates r always being produced.

Sent from Singapore Reef Club mobile app
 

If im using a test kit with an accuracy of 0.125ppm and i read 0. My nitrate is going to be 0.125ppm at most. Granted there may be false positive especially so if it is out of the test kit range. Easy to test for a false positive. Create a diluted control with distilled water.

Can refer to my thread for a better perspective

 

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1 hour ago, Komerider said:

Sea doesn't have high nitrates so keeping low nitrates is actually more accurately representing the natural environment. Thereafter it'll depend on whether the coral can get enough ` food` from just photosynthesis. Rest of the requirements r trace elements. If dosing food actually seems better then prob the corals on hand prefer clean water.

Sent from Singapore Reef Club mobile app
 

Allow me to clarify.

First.

It pays to quantify what you mean by high nitrates. 0.15ppm nitrates is considered high nitrates in research. If you read what i said in my nuisance algae thread. You will realise that nitrate sampled monthly may be zero consistently. But the value may be Flux drastically if i am sampling it hourly. 

Why? Because the aquarist feeds his tank. When you feed you are providing an influx of nutrients. 

Second. If you have read my thread on coral appreciation here

 

You will gain the perspective that a coral is not just coral. Consider the mutualistic relationship between the symbionts. Mutualism can be modelled based on cost benefit analysis. In different environment the cost-benefit trade changes.

In oligotrophic environment, the zooxanthellae nitrogen supply is controlled by the coral. Both are limited by nitrogen.

HOWEVER, zooxanthellae can uptake nitrogen from the surrounding water. In a reef aquarium where nitrogen is no longer the limiting factor, the zooxanthellae is no longer dependent on the coral host for nitrogen. This changes the mutualistic terms of trade between the coral host and zooxanthellae. It is believed that the zooxanthellae will compete with the coral host for nutrients. 

So think about it

Why is the zooxanthellae providing the coral host with 90-95% of its photosynthetic products? If you follow a cost benefit model for mutualism. It makes sense that the zooxanthellae is getting something (precious nitrogen) in return. 

 

Summary, if you read this far.

There is NOTHING wrong with ULNS. Want growth, feed corals. Simple.

Side note. There is also symbiotic cyanobacteria living with da coral. Cyanobacteria is able to fix nitrogen and provide a nitrogen source to the coral. However, nitrogen fixation is a very energetically expensive process. So without the coral heterotrophic feeding, I believe nitrogen is a limiting factor.

 

 

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21 minutes ago, Komerider said:

Yea as in it can't b 0. 0.1 is very good.

Sent from Singapore Reef Club mobile app
 

Why not 0 or any number arbitrarily close to 0.

I think 0.1 is still nutrient enriched.

Anyway, To be very honest, I dont think it really matters with hobby level accuracy and sampling frequency.

As I have mentioned, considering that feeding is an act of disturbance. It pays more to consider disturbance rate, nitrogen input (severity of disturbance) and not just how much im exporting, but export rate.

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With respect to trace element dosing.
It pays to consider what randy holmes say. Rather than what companies are trying to sell you...
http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2004-05/rhf/
Too much trace element is not good as well which could result to excess alage growth .

However it is not possible to test those minor trace elements unless going for a icp test, so like what some mention less is better than more in a reef tank

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2 hours ago, he said:

Too much trace element is not good as well which could result to excess alage growth .

However it is not possible to test those minor trace elements unless going for a icp test, so like what some mention less is better than more in a reef tank emoji28.png

Sent from Singapore Reef Club mobile app
 

Yes. Icp testing is a great advancement for us hobbyist. But must be cautious. There are two different icp tests. One is ICP optical emission spectrometry and another is ICP mass spectrometry.

From what I know. For optical emission spectrometry some wavelengths are close and may lead to inaccuracies for some elements.

In general, trace element dosing has the risk reward ratio skewed towards the negative end. Must be very cautious especially if dosing trace element complex. 

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Thinking of selling the red people eater colony and grow a monti cap, or some stubby acro.

1CC41F63-8B73-4E7E-A1D7-5457137F5AA1.thumb.jpeg.0fed38de52e8647cbfe7b8b0179f3c58.jpeg

Zoa garden getting too big, doesnt fit into the scape very well. Thinking of switching out the red ppl eater for a small rock and grow some sps, give the scape more structure.

D867D950-F301-433E-BB79-37CADAE48398.thumb.jpeg.afb4b408b84f8d2a1d6cf765a10b3c98.jpeg

What do you think?

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Just a quick update. Added some nice acro

dragon acro

Huge sulawesi sunset mille with turquoise tentacles

and a very nice pink-purple and green acro.

Growth is nice and steady.

Also added a tunze ato. Feel safe knowing theres two layers of redundancy in addition to the optical sensor. Plus easy dosing of sodium bicarbonate.

FB680F70-8A39-44E2-B83C-0D66AD4C26C1.thumb.jpeg.1b0873f444032cae7e0b0e4433227bdb.jpeg

2CFC0E91-D6D3-41C4-A9ED-F3A1397489C1.thumb.jpeg.9497d7397459c4e7ae7629453a3c5fdf.jpeg

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Saw an acropora monticulosa/gemmifera at a lfs. Would love to add one if space permits. Rarely see it and although its not very colourful, is an underappreciated coral.

pet peeve is with kessil. I love kessil for the well engineered spectrum. But just cant imagine why they produce a single puck instead of multipuck fixture. Led weakness is coverage and shading. Just makes more sense to add additional pucks like radion or AI....

last pet peeve is with the acropora abrotanoides. Brown acros can be lovely. But this maricultured piece just refuses to grow. At best miniscule growth. At worst im imagining things. Really kit kat acro...

 

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