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#1
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![]() Dosing sugar works but else than starting from very little amounts there are some other things that you should pay attention. After consuming nitrates and phosphates bacteria dies and establishes a film on the surface. If you remove this film phosphates and nitrates will be removed. To be able achive this you need a good surface skimming and a realy realy good protein skimmer. High bacteria population depletes the oxygen level so a good PS helps you out . Photesynthetic microalgae provides 40-50 % of coral's nutritional need. When you reach zero nitrates and phosphates corals will starve to death if you don't feed them with appropriate food. Also you should take the power outages into consideration. If you don't have a supplemantal solution for power outages oxygen level will go down very fast because of the high bacteria population and your animals will saphocate. If the reason for high nitrates and phostphates is your equipment or system i don't recommend you to dose any types of carbon source including Zeovit. I think Italian Blue coral method is safer than dosing only sugar. Since it is a homemade recipe that contains sugar as well else than reducing nitrates and phosphates it provides a good food source for the corals.
Last edited by kadaytar; 07-26-2007 at 05:02 AM. |
#2
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![]() Good point about O2.
yes ! my ORP dropped about 60 points, i just realised that! |
#3
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![]() I've have heard of the vodka thing before but I figured after dosing yourself with vodka, just like women at the bar all the tanks look better too.
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![]() Greg |
#4
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![]() Quote:
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#5
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![]() This is nothing new.
Why not try to fix the problem in a "safer" way than adding a carbon source. You are playing with fire. I have never dosed sugar myself but my brother had for years. He had tried it twice and both times, ended up with tank crashes. Long term, I think after about a year and a half, in one of his tanks, most corals began to get quite brown. I have read about why this happens when you dose sugar but I forget why. I think it was also most soft corals turning brown. IMO, adding a carbon source makes a tank very unstable over the long term. Why not just do things right, get the right equipment and forget dosing carbon all together! Add a refugium if your nitrates are high, get a better skimmer if your skimmer doesnt pull out thick brown skimmate, skim wet if needed, feed less, ect., ect. Another interesting thing is, I read an article a while ago about how in a few spots in the caribbean, corals were bleaching from from waste being pumped into the ocean. Traced it back to very high simple sugars...same as what your putting in your tank. I think the levels were off the charts and nothing like what people are dosing but still doesnt make sense to add. Personally, I think you need to find the source of the problem. |