Eric:
I greatly appreciate all of the papers that you have sent me, and I also greatly welcome your input in this thread.
The primary reason that I am here in this thread is to try to provide some counterbalance to Ron's assertions that "we are killing corals" and that I am personally doing so. It could be true. We may be killing corals with metal toxicity. But we also may not be. An ICP measurement is not definitive enough, IMO, to start telling people that it is a demonstrated fact, as Ron has done.
I've provided several reasons why his test may not demonstrate that we are killing corals. Which one, if any, is true? I don't know. There is just no allowance in his articles or posts that there is any possibility that we are not killing corals. I'm allowing for tha possibility, and in the case of some corals, it really has to be a likely probability since many of us have kept many corals thriving for many years. Are these the ones that are especially resistant? Maybe. Or maybe they even exemplify the majority of corals.
ut, (and I do ask that you bring me up to speed on this thread if I repeat what's been said, fail to cover issues addressed, miss a point, etc., because as I said, I couldn't/wouldn't/shouldn't read it all), and excuse me for being presumptuous, but so what? Chelators themselves may have their own set of effects....
Hmmm. I seem to have suggested this as well. That organics themselves may be more toxic than metals in our tanks. Even beyond chelators, many organsims release organics specifically to KILL other things. Ron tossed out this hypothesis as ridiculous since I have not personally measured the levels of these organics in my tank.
I greatly appreciate all of the papers that you have sent me, and I also greatly welcome your input in this thread.
The primary reason that I am here in this thread is to try to provide some counterbalance to Ron's assertions that "we are killing corals" and that I am personally doing so. It could be true. We may be killing corals with metal toxicity. But we also may not be. An ICP measurement is not definitive enough, IMO, to start telling people that it is a demonstrated fact, as Ron has done.
I've provided several reasons why his test may not demonstrate that we are killing corals. Which one, if any, is true? I don't know. There is just no allowance in his articles or posts that there is any possibility that we are not killing corals. I'm allowing for tha possibility, and in the case of some corals, it really has to be a likely probability since many of us have kept many corals thriving for many years. Are these the ones that are especially resistant? Maybe. Or maybe they even exemplify the majority of corals.
ut, (and I do ask that you bring me up to speed on this thread if I repeat what's been said, fail to cover issues addressed, miss a point, etc., because as I said, I couldn't/wouldn't/shouldn't read it all), and excuse me for being presumptuous, but so what? Chelators themselves may have their own set of effects....
Hmmm. I seem to have suggested this as well. That organics themselves may be more toxic than metals in our tanks. Even beyond chelators, many organsims release organics specifically to KILL other things. Ron tossed out this hypothesis as ridiculous since I have not personally measured the levels of these organics in my tank.