Keeping Nitrates and Phosphates Down
Keeping Nitrates and Phosphates Down
I am just getting back into this hobby after relocating so I don't have much to show but I have gone in a very different direction that has work for me for years.
I was always interested in filter feeders. When I started, there weren't the foods that are available now and there wasn't a blueprint for successfully growing these corals. Never the less, there has been a path for easily exporting nutrients and phosphates and this is the standard Algal Turf Scrubber (ATS). They can be fancy or simple but they work quite well.
Although they have been around since the early 90's and before, they have been slow to gain acceptance for a lot of reasons that don't have anything to do with their merit. When I read Dynamic Aquaria by Dr Adey, I had only been in the hobby for less than a year so I didn't have any tried and true methods that I could fall back on so I learned the hobby, making my mistakes within this paradigm. Now I am very comfortable using an ATS.
I re-started my tank one year ago and I have been slowly building up the capacity of my tank, just as aninjaatemyshoe suggested. I only added some dendro relatives a month ago and I got my first carnation two days ago.
All that being said, I completely bomb my tank several times a day with food and still can't get a test kit to read anything but zero. My rock is completely clean and I don't do water changes. My old tank was only bombed once a day, just before the lights went out but I put so much food in that you could not see any corals in the tank at all. By the next morning the tank was clear.
You can see my and last months corals in a couple of videos of the tank setup with the dump bucket and fug by clicking on these Youtube links:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRoKX8AjEbI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARl3jzpVd0g
The splash is just for fun.
You can also see my website with some old articles that were published on my last project and some renderings by clicking on this:
http://asaherring.com
Refugiums, with macro algae in it, are getting popular as a fall back or as an additional piece of the puzzle to help control nutrients but it is understandable that many people would not want to trust so much on something like this but it does work. It would be hard to go from something that you know works to something so very different. One of the other problems is that if you run both paradigms, they compete with each other. They work better as an "either or" system.
Since both systems work well, I will just say what I like about what I have chosen. Basically, it is simple, easy to maintain and reliable. I also like the idea that there isn't any mechanical filtration at all. That means that I can put food in and it circulates for a long time. If I set up my foods right, they do not settle to the bottom of the tank or sump for a very long time and the bacteria, and critters take care of the rest. That is why I have build up slowly to where I am now this new year. If there is anything left over to rot, it will immediately be taken up by the algae as fertilizer.
If this thread is about controlling N and P then this works...and it's simple. I only have a lights, pumps, lots of rock and sand in a refugium and a scrubber. That's it!