Adding Live Rock to an Established Tank

Patrick Cox

Active member
Hello,
I have a predominately SPS tank that I have been running for two years. It was started with Tampa Bay Saltwater Live Rock and it seems to be pretty stable right now with improving growth and color.

I am thinking about adding a few more pieces or live rock to get more room for corals higher up in the tank. What are the risks associated with this? I certainly don't want to stress my tank and risk losing any of my favorite colonies.

Picture...

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Thanks!
Pat
 
True, but the dry could have all kinds of bound terrestrial phosphate.

If you are worried about the sponges and/or phosphates, then get some rock from the Pacific and cure it. They wash all of that stuff off and the cure gets the rest. Just boat rock will do... it is cheap and will ship UPS most of the time.
 
True, but the dry could have all kinds of bound terrestrial phosphate.

If you are worried about the sponges and/or phosphates, then get some rock from the Pacific and cure it. They wash all of that stuff off and the cure gets the rest. Just boat rock will do... it is cheap and will ship UPS most of the time.

When you say "cure" it, do you mean soak it in heated saltwater with no light for a period of time? How do I know when the rock is cured?

Thanks,
Pat
 
I think people have different definitions when it comes to curing. If it's dry rock like pukani and you just want to rid it of dry decayed material and hopefully get some phosphates out of it then soaking in RO water and changing it out periodically will work. If your curing rock and seeding it with nitrifying bacteria so that it's cycled then heated saltwater would probably work the best.
 
Curing live rock is waiting for the stuff that died in shipping to be off the rock and gone. You know that this is done when the ammonia is at zero. This takes a few weeks,
 
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