Elevated Mg levels inhibit growth?

maxxII

Super Housemonkey!
I'm running my magnesium at around 1500. I dont recall where or who told me, but allegedly increased levels of mg are supposed to inhibit zoa/paly growth.

Anyone have any experiance with this?

Nick
 
Have you noticed a decrease in zoa/paly growth after raising your mag levels?

Nick

In my tank? no. I actually have great growth in my zoanthids. However, some do grow faster than others but that is normal. What sort of test are you using for the mag? (wish my UC's would grow a fast as PNG's haha). IMO stability is key. Did you raise the level of mag to its current level rapidly? Havn't seen any growth lately?
 
While I only have half a dozen zoa/paly types, they all are growing rapidly. I keep mine 1500-1600.
 
This is a quote straight from Randy Holmes-Farley
You can reed the full article here http://www.reefkeeping.com/issues/2004-05/rhf/index.php

Magnesium's primary importance is its interaction with the calcium and alkalinity balance in reef aquaria. Seawater and reef aquarium water are always supersaturated with calcium carbonate. That is, the solution's calcium and carbonate levels exceed the amount that the water can hold at equilibrium. How can that be? Magnesium is a big part of the answer. Whenever calcium carbonate begins to precipitate, magnesium binds to the growing surface of the calcium carbonate crystals. The magnesium effectively clogs the crystals' surface so that they no longer look like calcium carbonate, making them unable to attract more calcium and carbonate, so the precipitation stops. Without the magnesium, the abiotic (nonbiological) precipitation of calcium carbonate would likely increase enough to prohibit the maintenance of calcium and alkalinity at natural levels.

For this reason, I suggest targeting the natural seawater concentration of magnesium: ~1285 ppm. For practical purposes, 1250-1350 ppm is fine, and levels slightly outside that range (1200-1400 ppm) are also likely acceptable. I would not suggest raising magnesium by more than 100 ppm per day, in case the magnesium supplement contains impurities. If you need to raise it by several hundred ppm, spreading the addition over several days will allow you to more accurately reach the target concentration, and might possibly allow the aquarium to handle any impurities that the supplement contains.

An aquarium's corals and coralline algae can deplete magnesium by incorporating it into their growing calcium carbonate skeletons. Many methods of supplementing calcium and alkalinity may not deliver enough magnesium to maintain it at a normal level. Settled limewater (kalkwasser), in particular, is quite deficient in magnesium. Consequently, magnesium should be measured occasionally, particularly if the aquarium's calcium and alkalinity levels seem difficult to maintain. Aquaria with excessive abiotic precipitation of calcium carbonate on objects such as heaters and pumps might suffer from low magnesium levels (along with high pH, calcium, and alkalinity).

edit.
 
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no one was saying a higher concentration was the contributing factor in making zoas grow faster. Just people stating there is no notice of detrimental affects.





anyone else have zoas at the op levels or even highe and notice any effects? btw op....do u suppliment or what salt do you use? im just curious :)
 
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