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#1
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![]() I found these articles on Reef2Reef, and figured they were quite interesting.
I found most notable in the entire article is the NO3 level in ALL of the tanks quite high, though PO4 very low. Also, most of them add very little in the way of additives. No magic bullets, just stability. ![]() Anyway, check it out yourself... https://www.reef2reef.com/ams/tank-p...e-masters.263/ https://www.reef2reef.com/threads/fo...rt-two.305935/ |
#2
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![]() Very cool article. Its funny, I've been running a super low nutrient tank for almost a year now where my nitrates are about 2 and even though I have almost no algae of any kind left in the tank I do feel my coral have suffered. I know the trend and the advice on most sites in the last few years have been to reduce nitrates to almost 0 but I'm thinking its not really great for your coral.
I'm slowly removing a spoon full of biopellets a day until my reactor is empty and I'm going back to my old refugium that would keep my nitrates around 5-10 and see if my coral react better. My coral used to grow like weeds and have awesome color when I had some nitrate in the water. |
#3
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![]() Quote:
![]() ![]() Last edited by Myka; 05-18-2017 at 02:51 PM. |
#4
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![]() Careful. Some of the tinkerers take offence to the more laid back approach. I firmly believe you can build a beautiful system that is nearly self sustaining outside of the odd water change. I just did my first w/c in three months...I can leave it for weeks without feeding it (only 3 fish, copious amounts of pods and other fauna and the right inverts to stir things up). I keep sps and lps and zoas. I'll admit, I've added some corals that can't handle my system so there has been some trial and error. I also think my magic bullet is a sea hare and I've always found the more my hands are in a tank, the more things go wrong. It's adverse to what an LFS will tell you but it works for me. I've had saltwater tanks since 2001 and been using this methodology for the last 5 or 6 years. Mostly because I still love the hobby but the constant pouring of money and especially time got old. So now it's come to this. I'm not saying this is the best way. Only that it works.
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Red Sea Minimum Last edited by Myka; 05-19-2017 at 03:36 PM. Reason: Each sentence doesn't need a new paragraph haha |
#5
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![]() Yeah, there are lots of methods that do little to no water changes. It all depends on what your expectations are.
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#6
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![]() Quote:
I've made no secret that I do a monthly water change and that I rarely test my water but I also did my homework per se I have purposely went with relatively easy corals to keep and hardy fish. My tank is a softie tank as I know I am not setup to take difficult coral or high maintenance fish. The caveat to all the above is to do your homework and research endlessly because it is very easy to kill a tank with kindness or have a revolving door of dead coral and fish and algae up the yin yang. It is easy to over tinker with your tank and not tinker enough and I know there are those that are annoyed to no end with me because I am laid back about water changes and maintenance but then again I have a well established tank what I do works for me and if it bothers them it's their problem not mine.
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