How do you keep your live sand so white???

frezel

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I have a 3 inch live sand bed and i have coraline growing on it and it discolors as well. i never vacuum my tank when doing water changes i have lots of hermits and nassries snails but still when i look at all of your pictures they have peferctly white sand bed.. itsnot fair what is the secret to a pure white sand bed?
 
I think it is just time, and having a skimmer/fuge to eat up all the nutriants so nothing can grow on the sandbed. but don't take my word for it, my sand bed filthy.
 
well you could get a goby that keeps turning up the sand bed? ive heard it works from a few people
 
Good water circulation..
Keep the water moving.. Just not so that it makes a sandstorm...
Just enough so anything lighter than sand will not settle...
 
Circulation, flow and skimming I think will def. have a effect but size of sand particles I think is more important. Smaller sizes will not discolor as much as larger. If you have a crushed coral SB, you'll more likely see coraline build up then if you have a southdown. I would think it was because of movement, smaller particles move much more than bigger.
 
I keep 3 sand sifting stars in my tank. They keep the sand bed Beautiful and totally clean of any of your problems. I know some people say they may eat too much out of your sand bed, but they have been great for me. It also allows me to do just quick water changes instead of siphon cleaning the gravel. try them out!
 
I will occasionally vacuum the top 1/8th inch when I do a water change (this picks up a lot of detrus). I then cleac the sand (usually only a cup or so) and put it back in the tank later.
 
TwentyFivePSI said:
I can't speak for anyone else but my sandbed always looks whiter in pictures than it does in real life.
This is the real secret.
It's the light reflected on the white sand that makes it BLINDING white in pics.
I take pics of my tank and my sand is bliding white, but when i look at it, it's almost tan.
 
Queen conch will grow to the size of a football if not starve to death first. I would use a fighting conch (Strombus alatus) instead. Columbellids that readily reproduce in our tanks would be useful.

Conch needs about two square feet of open sand per inch of snail shell to survive.

Sand sifting star will void sand of life in no time and starve to death. I would spend my money elsewhere.

Nassarius are carrion eaters and will do nothing other than stirring it. If you got the guts you could try a cucumber.
 
I used to have algae covered sand problem until I got this BIG Yellow Head Goby. Never thought he's such as house keeper, constantly shifting sand and poking at Live Rocks to get rid of particles. I have a colony of bristle worms in the right corner and this goby eats them everyday for food.

I love my yellow head. I have scores of different pods and specimens all over the sand bed and goby's huge apetite can never keep up with the sand bed.

This is a dream come true for Live Sand Bed, super white and clean sand, while supporting scores if not hundreds of different specimens in Live Rocks and Live Sand.
 
romunov said:
If you got the guts you could try a cucumber.

i've had a cuc in my tank for over a year without any problems.. he's the ugliest thing you ever seen but he does keep the sand white
 
My cuke turns over the sand, but he leaves little rabbit pellet shaped sand-turds all over.
 
romunov said:
If you got the guts you could try a cucumber.
If you try a cucumber, you'll have the guts :lol:


captain.gif
Aye, 'tis a remorseless moving bowel from the briny deep devouring all in it's path and leaving grapeshot in it's wake. An evil creature when scorned will turn himself out and show you his guts in hellish contempt. Arrrrr!
 
nethawk73 said:
has anyone tried a horseshoe crab? I've heard they are great at stirring things up.

Just like the Sand Stars, they will eventually run out of food. I have had both.

Neat to watch, but rare to see.

HTH,
Steve
 
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