I currently have a 75 gallong display tank and a 38 gallon sump/refugium below it. The majority of the refugium is full of chaetomorpha macroalgae. I prune it frequently and I assume it is absorbing excess nutrients.
I have a separate 15 gallon tank that I use for quarantine. If I prune half my chaeto, add it to the 15 gallon tank, which has no excess nutrients in it and expose it to sunlight for a certain length of time, will it eventually use up it's supply of nutrients? When I add it back to the refugium, would it absorb more nutrients and in a quicker amount of time?
I was thinking about this the other day because the chaeto sits in the refugium and absorbs nutrients and grows bigger. I assume the chaeto uses some nutrients to grow, but it is storing the rest. I guess you could equate this experiment to adding a slightly wrung out sponge to a glass of water and adding a totally wrung out sponge to a glass of water. If it worked, it might be a way of exporting nutrients out of the system quicker.
Any thoughts?
I have a separate 15 gallon tank that I use for quarantine. If I prune half my chaeto, add it to the 15 gallon tank, which has no excess nutrients in it and expose it to sunlight for a certain length of time, will it eventually use up it's supply of nutrients? When I add it back to the refugium, would it absorb more nutrients and in a quicker amount of time?
I was thinking about this the other day because the chaeto sits in the refugium and absorbs nutrients and grows bigger. I assume the chaeto uses some nutrients to grow, but it is storing the rest. I guess you could equate this experiment to adding a slightly wrung out sponge to a glass of water and adding a totally wrung out sponge to a glass of water. If it worked, it might be a way of exporting nutrients out of the system quicker.
Any thoughts?