taricha said:
Thanks so much for crystalizing the idea for me. That idea connects a lot of things I've had knocking around in my head
Thanks for doing your homework and stepping up. I've said before that there's an enormous amount of energy and creativity in this hobby... All that's missing from the mix is some fresh science to help get people pointed in more or less the right direction when they're inspired to venture off the edge of the map and see if they turn up something interesting to bring back and share with the rest of us.
Speaking of which -- is it my imagination, Quiet_Ivy, or are you Up To Something?
taricha said:
I've also thought maybe I should cultivate the skimmer mix in the dark, that way the organisms in the mix would be undisturbed by lights out, and I could hit the dinos with a 1-2 of darkness + skimmer mix. I couldn't call it "green tea" though, Maybe I'll call that skimmer "black tea."
That reminds me...
34cygni said:
If I'm right about TDA-making, coral-friendly rosies in shed mucus getting skimmed off, then this is clearly a good idea...
01/11/2016, 09:08 AM #2618
seamonster124
6) Opened skimmer's collection cup drain to allow it to drain right back into the sump.
...but could be there's a better way. If a skimmer drained or overflowed into a bioreactor of some sort, perhaps we could culture coral-friendly bacteria before returning the skimmate to the system. Maybe the Montireef Protocol can be automated, enhanced, and made to work reliably.
If taricha's upgrade to the Montireef Protocol shows promise, some of the makers on RC might consider executing such a skimmer mod if for no other reason than because publicly doing so would demonstrate prior art and make it less likely that the idea can be successfully patented by the Aquarium-Industrial Complex. Come to think of it, a patent-preventing proactive build along these lines might be an even better idea if it
doesn't work, as it looks like something that might make good snake oil...
taricha said:
I screwed up the tests somehow, contaminated all the beakers. Killed everything dino sized and larger in every beaker.
There's not a lot of ecological resilience or thermal mass in teeny-tiny systems, so it may just be that they crashed... But since you mentioned that you're working in a classroom, if you repeat the experiment, consider preparing two control beakers and putting one in an undisclosed secure location to make sure they weren't intentionally contaminated.
This is just vague paranoia, but a few years ago in the area where I live, 2 or 3 of the SW LFS's were struck by poisoning -- probably an OTC garden chemical surreptitiously dumped into their DTs. That didn't strike me as significant until I came across this paper while I was doing my homework...
Changes in microbial diversity associated with two coral species recovering from a stressed state in a public aquarium system
https://www.researchgate.net/profil...ium_system/links/0046352724295301c1000000.pdf
It appears someone attempted to poison the reef tank at the
Horniman Museum and Gardens in London in November, 2010.
I have no idea if this was purest vandalism or some sort of moral misfire -- the aquarium version of monkey wrenching -- but it has crossed my mind that poisoning aquariums may be a thing in some social circles.