great topic! i just added a new powerhead to my tank that i turn on for a few hours once a week. It really cleans things off and the coral and fish seem to like it
Kevin, it is a good topic because there is no ground probes, no DSBs vs SSBs vs BB vs UGF VS Paris Hilton and most of all no GFCIs.
Those things can go on forever especially because I for one disagree with almost everything

.
The only person I always agree with is Waterkeeper.
Well, OK so I never agree with him, but that doesn't make him wrong.
He is always correct, (unless he is talking about DSBs then it is Science Fiction, OK not even Science Fiction. Pulp Fiction (and I don't even know what that is)
What is this thread about?
Oh yeah, How is the ocean like a tank?
I don't really know but my wife went out with her friends tonight and I just made some really good linguini with clams. Too bad I had no oysters. But I got really good olive oil, no not that junk you get in a supermarket. And really good cheese, also not the stuff from a supermarket. (great wine also, I made it two years ago)
:smokin:
Anyway being I am talking about bivalves which are from the sea, I may as well say that there is another difference from the sea to our tanks in that clams will starve in our tanks very quickly.
We have no microscope free swimming life to speak of.
Well I do but that is Long Island Sound stuff and it does not live very long, no where near long enough to feed a clam or a sea fan.
Speaking of sea fans, which by the way will not live in a tank for the above reasons, have you ever dove in a forest of sea fans? They are all positioned the same way, perpendicular to the flow. And the flow where those fans live is usually much too strong for us to try to swim against. And while you are hanging on to a rock amid a sea of sea fans you will be amazed by the amount of life flying past those tiny polyps on those sea fans. It always awes me to watch how they vibrate due to the current and they still manage to catch enough food.
Impossable to supply in a tank. No way, no how.
I hatch brine shrimp every day, just a pittence of the life in the sea, almost not worth it if I were trying to keep clams or sea fans.
Not even the correct nutrition.
Bacteria, lets talk about bacteria. I know I beat that topic to death but I really feel there would be almost no tank crashes and no nitrate if we harvested bacteria from the sea.
(If you have one of those unmentionable substraits, you are on your own)
People don't think about bacteria because we can't see it, but they are the sole thing keeping your tank alive, or killing it.
If we see a thriving, pristine coral reef, bacteria has a lot to do with it. If we see a polluted, stinking harbor, bacteria is also the cause. The correct bacteria in the correct numbers is the secret to this hobby. Keeping the correct bacteria hinges on giving them a place to hang out where they are comfortable enough to re produce faster than undesirable bacteria.
But even the correct bacteria will not help us forever. We need to add them occasionally to give them an advantage over the not so welcome bacteria which will eventually colonize the entire tank pushing out the good bacteria. It's why you are changing water to eliminate nitrate. The bacteria should do that for you.
No, the bacteria will not help you change water, eliminate nitrates. Follow along.
OK now this is all my opinion and I am older than almost all of you so humor me. For any negative reactions from this, send a self addressed stamped envelope to Waterkeeper, care of this forum.
He is younger than me and probably cares more
