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The first .5 pico reef 2001, video


brandonm
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just found this pic too. it shows the original rock structure in the bowl on day 1 of the build. If you compare this with the full grown shot earlier, you can see the rock facing has not been moved or repositioned at all in 4 years of submersion. I shudder to think what it might look like in between a rock bottom and the surface layer, but it still seems that if it were packing in detritus algae growth would be the first sign.

I truly feel this feed-and-strip method is the near solution to detritus altogether> along with great removal of what does forum naturally

the sexy shrimp was traded out for the stenopus coral banded. the thor a. was just too hard on my lps corals although I'd buy another one if they showed up again in lfs

taking inverts out with a water change is easy, just siphon them right out into a net or you can blast clean them right out into the sink and catch them...

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I realise perhaps one of your trick about a deep sand bed could be the key to the whole trick of keeping a pico tank. (becuase mine was a rather shallow sandbed.)

The next reason why keeping a pico is difficult for me was that I was trying to keep a pico "squeaky clean with white sand and all that" and when Isee you tank, it is rather "dirty" with detritus algae growth and all that. Perhaps I could endure the dirt and perhaps after a few years, the "dirt" will become food and the environment will settle down and life will adapt itself.

I do have a 2ft tank at home where I have lots and lots of live rock in the sump and in fact, I have not change my water for about a year now since the last one and just do regular water top-up with water straight off our tap water and so far, all is great and alive.

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great point about the sandbed, Im four years into it w no problems. Just wanted to add though that if you can see some of the color detail in the bed there are a lot of reds and shades of light green, no blacks indicating fouled pockets. since sunlight from a window hits the tank fully at 5 pm for 30 mins, this appears as a multi-hued color pattern of healthy algaes in the bed, rather than pockets of food or animal waste unprocessed. I really feel if the bowl held any untoward nutrients, and is unskimmed as it is, algae would wreck the system so be very careful how you feed a sandbedded tank in my opinion.

although Id like it to be white to offset the top colors better, it looks about par for an ugly aged sandbed lol

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  • 1 month later...
  • SRC Member
Thank you very much that is great. I am friends with SRC I like that site and their little chat box scolling up top lol. What a great community you all are, by the way everyone is so nice.

Did you know Tiffanydunk's pico was the first thread I read here, can't remember how I found it but I thought that was the best subgallon pico Id seen in years. NICE Tiffanydunk you were being featured in the USA and didn't even know it lol :idea:

ME?? where's the link?? u got me excited.

pico pico pico.

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I am posting up my response to a pm sent to me because I think the system is not replying because of some technical thing. This was a pertinent subject so to get it to oddball and anyone else I'll just make it a public comment:

Hi oddball thanks for asking Id love to chat. Luckily the system notified me of your message, if that ever doesn't work just hit me up on comments.

Regarding the UGF being a nitrate factory, they can, but there are also measures of control if you are determined to keep one.

Why have one? they can help expose wastes to more active surface area, you know by drawing water through the substrate than just passively around it. This is only needed if you are registering ammonia, after cycling, when the tank shouldn't show ammonia it means your bioload is exceeding your surface area, so any additions- be they UGF, mechanical filter etc will reduce ammonia by using more surface area + oxygenation to convert that ammonia.

So UGF's work the same as any filter that traps waste, that's where the factory issue comes in. It's hard to vacuum up under the grating, and this continual degredation of detritus yields a constant pump of nitrate, but then again so does any filter that traps particles for filtration. It's just canisters are easier to clean! So, the firm rule of all aquaria, not just nano reefs, is you already know exactly how much filtration is needed without a guess. If, after a good cycle, your feeding regimen or stocking of animals -ever- yields measurable ammonia you need more surface area from one of any common means including UGF. If you have never registered ammonia after cycling or a good heavy feeding, no extra filtration is needed and in fact any extra filtration becomes a nitrate trap if you don't clean them a lot. Lastly, some people choose to use filtration to clean the water of suspended particles, not just for ammonification. Based on this paragraph, I hope it will let you choose your filtration as needed without trapping too much waste.

You know I wasn't including a skimmer in this analogy since it actually removes, exports wastes unlike trap filters.

The mantis' are exquisitely sensitive to ammonia I would be interested to know if you ever measured any recently. Sometimes a large feeding, coupled with their nitrogenous waste thereafter, can briefly overwhelm your surface areas with a small burst of ammonia generated, this is just a guess. Youd have to test the setup again with another mantis I really can't guess what it would be one-off because poor genetics of the animal or simple disease can't be ruled out.

The algae is a common life form in cycling tanks, but I am sure you do not have to let it bloom in order to cycle. Better to never have it, or you may end up battling it!

It's easier to avoid algae in a tiny pico cuz you can just change water more often than a larger tank, so I never let it bloom. The first time I see a sprig of algae, I *permanently alter my water change by adding an extra one each week, which keeps algae gone forever. In tanks where algae catch a footing due to lack of water changes, you can have algae for weeks and weeks even after you fix your nutrient issues because all plants can live on their own internal stores for quite some time. That's why any old Joe can go buy a water plant, go home and put it in a vase and not care for it and it will live a month still, it's just existing on internal stores, and algae will do the same and trick you into thinking your tank is still producing it when in fact the water may be clean enough now to have never sprouted it!!! Watch out for that phenomena in algae control.

Stay in touch sorry I couldn't be more specific but altering these variables I mentioned above will give you a more controlled start for next round of tank experimentation. Try to remove all the algae you can manually, burn some of it off with a jet flame cig lighter by draining the tank for a water change if you can, this works great!

You need to change water more often now, matter of fact get your nitrates double checked by someone else to ensure kit validation, and always keep it below 10 ideally 5 or less. Some wouldn't recommend you work to keep them that low, but I always have so it's all I know. I didn't see a phosphate reading, but it's usually closely coupled to nitrate anyway (both coming from tank feeding) and DNA is actually made fundamentally from both elements (N and P) so it's neat to see that anywhere you have life, you have detritus, ammonia, nitrate and phosphate if the degredation teams are working correctly. You can skim more, vacuum better (which may mean removing that UGF if you aren't willing to undergo far more water changes, say 80% weekly until your problems subside. Im afraid at your current rate the system will become algae dominant so this is my prescription lol

B

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  • 1 year later...

Hello team and friends

I logged back in to post an update to this vase, the same vase is now approaching 65+ months and it is very helpful to take some of the activities Im using to run this bowl for so long and incorporate them into your pico reefs if they need tuning.

The major things Im doing to get an indefinate, algae free lifespan for this bowl:

-big water changes. small partial water changes, like the rules we used to follow with larger tanks, is killing pico reefs slowly around the globe. They run for a year at best, then start to take on algae and animal death/coral growth slows and then stops

-using peroxide, hydrogen peroxide, as an immediate treatment for algae when it does pop up. The use of peroxide as spot treatments in the nano reef is the single best killer of algae Ive ever seen, its preferable to chasing perfect water params to try and starve it. We are being advised to treat algae in the nano reef incorrectly. Its not about clean up crews and perfect water params, peroxide is truly amazing and a cheat that can't be underestimated. There is no need to test nitrate and phosphate in my pico reefs, because algae cannot grow when it is treated with peroxide. The method of peroxide killing is very specific, you don't dump it in the tank. ask if you want to know, or if you have problem algae you can't beat even with good water params. By using peroxide, I do less work on my tank for algae than any other pico reef 1/4th as old. peroxide is the best thing I have ever come across in a decade of pico reef work

-dosing the tank with c balance two part solution. Without adding a two part solution, my water changes would be so constant it wouldn't be worth it. C balance calcium and alk allows me to get the longest period in between water changes I can get (one week, two max if on a vacation where I have someone come dose the tank)

the method for dosing a pico reef is nothing like adding two part to a larger tank. I feel it is not possible to keep a gallon reef alive past 3 years without dosing, they are opposite than larger reefs in ion consumption, tiny reefs that are aged need more dosing, not less, as we've been told by people who have no experience with aged pico reefs of a small size

-feeding the tank only when a water change is planned. Pico reefs tend to be cared for like miniature large tanks, and this is another reason they die before three years commonly. When you feed a tiny pico reef everyday, you sink waste into the rock surfaces and the sandbed and then as it reaches a setpoint all that waste starts to come back out. Usually by the 15th month...

instead, if you will stock lightly or none on the fishes that require daily feeding, a huge coral load and a loading of inverts like I keep in my reefbowl will acclimate to bi weekly or weekly feeding without a problem and this is better for your tank because it stores up less accumulative nutrient. Rather than feed lightly each day which underfeeds the animals and creates waste buildup, I wait until water change time and feed the tank 10x the normal amount of feed, enough for a 75 gallon tank. thats right, I feed my one gallon pico the amount of cyclopeeze you'd put in a 75 gallon tank.

the trick is, I only let it swirl for an hour than I change out all the water, leaving only fattened polyps and amphipods full of feed instead of barely fed. unused feed is ripped out, it doesn't penetrate into the bed. Whats in the sand bed is the usual detritus in the process of degrading, but the amount of waste in the bed is greatly reduced due to the feed timing. the result is a mega clean reef considering the age, all original sand and rock and corals, zero invasive algae at any time in the life of the tank (day 1 until now, no algae is part of a cycle thats wrong too) and animals that are so numerous I would estimate there are more than 10,000 life forms able to be seen with the naked eye in this vase.

This vase is the oldest pico reef in the world (longest running original setup no teardown) and its a model to show a way of reversing the usual rules of pico reef care to make your tanks live as long or longer.

Across the internet, here are the max lifespans per gallon of water in even the best cared pico reefs, this is helpful to know:

1 gallon and less- 8 mos max lifespan using the common care recommendations

2-3 gallons -2 yrs at best, with the longest Ive ever seen at 3 years documented (El Fab's reef at nano reef.com)

a keeper on reefcentral said she had a 3 gallon for 8 years but there is no thread documentation or pics. We only go off pics and vid, not stated ages because I don't believe them.

4-5 gallon same lifespan as the 2's and 3's, but tanks attaining the 3 year mark are becoming more common.

in my next post I will link an update vid and pics for my vase as of this week

Brandon

see ya'll in 2012 for the 75 month update lol

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I would also like to mention the way we are cycling the new pico reef is a significant cause of problems, old tank syndrome, late in the life of the tank if it makes it that far without hardware failure.

We are told to follow a hands off approach in fear of upsetting some balance in the pico reef (usually its bacteria we fear upsetting) and we are told that alternating generations of algae and diatoms are normal and you just wait until they subside, and are either replaced with another generation or a clean tank, whatever the odds throw at you.

I have seen this to be patently wrong in practice. Allowing generations of algae and diatoms to inhabit your tiny pico at any time allows for biomass of that organism to take up residence either in active or potentiated forms, such that the slightest nutrient imbalance after month 15 starts to grow more algae than you ever were ready to deal with.

Diatoms themselves, the general term we use to describe the brown haze that shows up on the rocks of new pico reefs, isn't exactly harmful per se but they often show up bound with other forms of algae within the floc/biomass/biofilming and its this combo intruder that has the chance to throw string diatoms at you, cyano bacteria, and the common forms of green hair algae we all despise. Concomitant sporulation of algaes together is a problem not often predicted by those relying on the hands off/it'll cycle itself admonition from those who specialize in large tank care.

If you simply remove all algae, the instant you see it, with one of the proven abiotic methods, no invasive pest can ever take over your tank.

Fire can be used in place of peroxide, I have fire burned every known pest you can list. I do this by draining my tank water down and burning the offending pest directly, then filling up the water. No poisons are created, that was a false assumption made by many in the online forums:

The point is when you see red turf algae, or green hair algae, or any of the invasive macro algaes like valonia/bryopsis, you don't add an animal to fix it, you fix it yourself free of charge and without increasing the bioloading of the tank that is causing the initial problem.

Peroxide shows an amazing effect whereby algaes that are consistently treated simply stop coming back to the tank even under the same water params that may have caused the first bloom. We were always told you have to eradicate the source to stop the algae, not true. As long as water params are within coral growth zones, algae can be eliminated abiotically (without animals or natural methods) and it can be eradicated without considering water param measures like nitrate and phosphate. There is nothing wrong with using nitrate or phoshpate consuming media or tank designs (ATS scrubbers) but this is just an alternate method to attain a perfectly algae free tank for the complete duration of any pico reef

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before and after fire burning in the vid on red brush algae

before and after peroxide treatment on green hair algae, posted by my friend .Newman:

using abiotic methods to control algae and pests makes them come back less often, not more often. We have been incorrectly told that stripping the water of nutrients (phosphate and nitrate) is the only way to stop algae. Maybe if I can keep the bowl going into the next decade some of the professional writers might agree to look into rule bending and what that means for reef tank care as a whole. I do hardly any algae work on my bowl, but its supposed to be wrecked with algae because I have measurable phosphates etc...

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challenges with long term pico reef care:

-one challenge in running a pico reef long term is to keep stocking animals vs letting the ones you have grow into position. Slow additions to a pico reef and corals that take on biomass themselves work hand in hand to downregulate the chemicals corals use to make warfare. its better to age your tank and let it pack, vs pack it up front and hope it ages.

-sps color retention is very very challenging. Im running some blue sps now for a few months that is doing well, but the darkening of sps has been shown to correlate with higher nutrient indexes + lighting challenges created as corals shade each other and systems age

all this is the next generation of pico reef work, ULNS work and dose specific colorations are two SPS fronts slowly taking shape in the world of pico reef care and design. Hope this helps spur some thought with your tanks

B

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Hi brandonm, its nice to see that you're made this thread alive again!

Will have to read this thread from the start when I'm back from work, the pictures are too intensive to be discreet in the office. :welldone:

Sometimes the good guys gotta do bad things to make the bad guys pay. - Harvey Specter

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Hi, glad you update the thread. It is ok to see that the pico is still running. I finally closed my 2ft tank after 4 years due to the fact that the wrought iron frame is rusting and staining my ceramic flooring. I do miss the marine but now I am into fire belly toads. :)

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Nice good to see the creator of this vase tank here in Src . Seen your tank years back you are an inspiration .

Zac's Red Sea Reefer 170

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  • 1 year later...

:shock: WOW!!!

Display Tank : 36" x 20" x 20" Herbie overflow box design, Sump : 36" x 21" x 17", Frag Tank : 16” x 20” x 16”, custom built by Tank Culture.

Lightings : Ecotech  Radion XR15 Pro x 2 for Main Display Tank, Inled R80 x 1 for Frag Tank.

Chiller : Dalkin 1hp compressor with build-in drop coil.

Skimmer : Skimz Octa SC205i Protein Skimmer.

FR : H2Ocean FMR75 Fluidised Media Reactor with Hailea HX-2500 (Feeder Pump) running Rowaphos.

CR : Skimz Monzter E Series CM122 Calcium Reactor.

BPR: Marine Source Biopellet  Reactor with Continuum Reef Biopellet Fuel. 

Main Return Pump : SICCE Syncra ADV 9.0 & Jebao ACQ-10000 Water Pump.

Wavemaker : Jebao MOW-9 x2 for Main Display Tank & Jebao SLW-20M  Sine Wave Pump for  Frag Tank.

Water Top Up: AutoAqua Smart ATO Lite.

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  • 1 year later...

Wow. This is fascinating. Was thinking of starting a pico tank in my office! Glad that I stumbled across it. Forgot the know how of starting a marine tank after so many years. But I guess I can always pick it up again :) Time to shop for a suitable tank!

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  • 2 months later...

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