Acro question

drd

Member
Why are only florescent green accros grow in my tank any other bleach in a few days two a couple weeks if not green
I suspect it may be with the lighting.
 
sorry for butting in,. I'm a SPS noob (total newbie in general). But white LED's have negative effects on corals?

imo white LED's are a lot stronger than people realize... I had similar green/bleaching SPS issues a while back and they went away once I cranked the blues to 100% and whites down to 20-30%. The whites were at around 40-50% and it was wrecking my colors. I think it's pretty dependent on the fixture too, so ymmv
 
Hmmm. I'm going to try that out. I haven't been able to get much coloration out of a number of my corals and haven't been able to pin it down to anything specific (already at low nutrient, adding AAs, have plenty of flow, etc.). As with anything in this hobby, it's hard to nail it down to one specific thing, but this might be something to consider exploring.

FYI I'm using DIY 3w LEDs 2" over the water, no reflectors. 24 LEDs, 1/2 RB, 1/2 mix of CW, NW, UV, L, R. The RBs are running at about 70% and mix are at 55%.

Also worth noting that I have a huge Acropora Formosa - ORA Stuber Stag - that is growing up to the water line directly under white and UV LEDs, and it has also split at the top into multiple new corallites each reaching out widely and growing, despite being directly under a neutral white LED (3,700-5,000K temp).

The mystery of LEDs and the mystery of SPS collide making compounded mysteries.
 
Led lights
Ammonia and nitrite undetectable
Ph 8.3
DKH 10
Mag 1425
Ca 450
Nitrate and phosphate undetectable
Tank size 20 gallons.
 
What led light? It's been my observation over time that green Sps are the easiest to keep in pretty much any lighting, low to high par. I mean what's easier to grow then green slimer and green monti cap. Green, orange and brown corals are in general easier to keep. They grow under mh, led, cf, t5 and vho and the highly colored acros grew under mh, t5 and now led due to higher par values. So based on my own observations and opinion I'm initially inclined to lean towards par being low. Acros will expel their zooxanthellae for multiple reasons not just Ito intense of lighting.
 
78 Watts. Four colors red/white/blue/royal blue
Montis also do not survive with montis it does not matter what color.
What is interesting is gorgonians do well so does blue ridge and cup corals.
Is there any corals that I can pursue besides green ones.
 
IMO, what makes the tank look like a reef has less to do with types of coral and more about letting them mature and grow in
 
It would be great to help you so you could keep any and all corals you want. Nano tanks are tough

IMO, what makes the tank look like a reef has less to do with types of coral and more about letting them mature and grow in

The man speaks the truth. Having a nano that is grown in, I've seen how tough it is, and how long it takes. You need about a year and a half of solid success to really have it feel "mature" like a reef. And that means very stable parameters and very little tweaking, both of which are particularly challenging in a nano.
 
I as well kept a 28 nano for 4+ years and it was tough. Algae issues and a couple mini crashes. Key to nanos IMO is consistent water changes. Can't take a week off on those. If you do, things can get out of whack quick
 
I as well kept a 28 nano for 4+ years and it was tough. Algae issues and a couple mini crashes. Key to nanos IMO is consistent water changes. Can't take a week off on those. If you do, things can get out of whack quick

Funny, because I've been largely not doing water changes consistently. I started the first 6 months or so doing bi-weekly water changes. After that, it's been about every 1.5 months between water changes. They're easy enough to do, I just prefer stability and am generally lazy.

I do think water changes are a key to success. I'm about 80% to success with about 30% effort, so in my book I'm doing well. Lots of growth, pretty good colors, fishes are happy, and very little algae. Carbon dosing, skimming, and the occasional water change have made it stable. It's all about setting up a sustainable rhythm.

Any pics of your 4+ year old nano? I'd like to see a real mature system.
 
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