<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7181844#post7181844 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by piercho
Tom, thanks for your feedback. I may be at cross-purposes by cultivating both coral and plants. For now, because of the coral, I'm too superstitious to push a 5 PPM NO3 level. I do intend to do some trials with adding NO3, but it would be more in the 0.1 PPM range, at least to start with.
Yes, there is a trade off there with different species and culturing in small glass boxes.
It's much easier to maintain 5-10ppm of NO3 than 0.5-10.0ppm NO3.
So for ease of use/culture, I like the weeds more. They are easier to trace causation.
You can add more NO3 without issue to most corals, but limit the PO4 instead, it's easier and low amounts don't cause algae blooms, unlike NO3.
What test kit do you possibly own that is even close to being accurate at 0.1ppm of NO3?
Even the best Lamotte kit is only 1-4ppm accuracy over a 0-15ppm range..........
In aquatic freshwater planted tanks, NO3 drop at rates due to plants around 2-4ppm a day.
A good marine planted tank will have perhaps 25-50% this amount. So 0.1ppm.......that's not even worth talking about, that would last for a blip.
also, the lower you get, the less bioavailable the NO3 often is, same for PO4, but most smaller noxious algae do have the ability and are well adapted at cleavage of the organic bound fractions, whereas the larger macrophytes tend to rely on inorganic labile forms of nutrients and require far more.
Test kits you folks use do not distingush between what types of N or P, they test total N and P mostly and have poor resolutions at lower levels.
I would strongly caution against reading into them too much without making a standard curve with 3 standard solutions when you test anything and want to be accurate.
Folks have been making these mistakes in the hobby for many years and the correlation to the problems is often very poor and sends folks on long protracted goose chases.
In science, we make standard curves and that's the way things are done, you have to test the test kit method. Otherwise who knows.........
I get even more suspicious when the leveles get down very low, the risk of bottoming out is very high and provides very little wiggle room.
Some folks can a balance the bioload with the nutrient needs at low levels, but in most cases, there's some good old luck involved to that balance.
I'd rather use the wider ranges that are non limiting and focus on one nutrient, say PO4.
You cannot co limit both NO3 and PO4 realitiscally(It does occur and shifts back in forth in some systems) in a tank, so just pick the least problematic(fish foods tend to be higher in N than P).
Regards,
Tom Barr