Let's talk about water quality in an SPS tank.

Just wanted to throw my hat in the pro-filter sock ring.
I really love my socks.
I have four socks (ony on in operation at a time) and change them out 2-3 times a week.
Yes, it is an added step. However, the bits of hair algae, sand, and other crud found in them during the change out, I know isn't going back into my tank.

But I completely agree with all of you in the need to change them frequently. If not, its the same as the good old bio-balls.
 
I have 4 100 micron socks that i rotate out every 2-3 days, so there is no chance of that stuff in there starting to break down.

Joe - what brand of charcoal are you usiing? And is it in a fluidizer type reactor or just in a bag?

Awsome tank again and you are doing it right.

G-money - how about a picture of that sump?
 
JB,

regarding the chaetomorph in your refugium, it is doing well, isn't it? Unless I am missing something, this would indicate that your phosphates are still high enough to keep the chaeto alive.

Has anyone had the macroalgae in their refugium die as a result of using Rowaphos or similar products?

Tom:fish2:
 
I mainly don't use the filter socks just because I don't feel like changing them every few days. I tried to setup the system to not need them. So far I'm happy with the setup with out sponges or filters, but as long as you change them out I don't think they are a problem.

1234I use black diamond charcoal.

Tom, My chaeto is growing but really, really slow. I'm sure there is some phosphates in the water column that is letting it grow. But so far not that much that any other algae is really growing anywhere else.
 
So here is a picture of the end of the tank a few days later. I'll clean the glass today. It's been 7 days since I last cleaned it and here is what it looks like from the end. I taped a piece of white paper and wrote "Can you read this?" on the far end 6 feet away.

DSCN4486.jpg
 
With the summer coming up, I just wanted to point out a little bit about my philosophy about temperature.

I keep my reef at 82F in the peak of summer and 78F during winter. While I am aware that some recognized people recommend keeping a reef tank at higher temperatures, as high as 85F. I choose not to, for a few reasons. Most importantly, because my tank is not a real reef in the Pacific. Because it is not a real reef, I have higher nutrient levels, less lighting, less current and more chances for stress to become a factor than the real environment from which these animals come from. By keeping a higher temperature, I feel you run a higher risk from bleaching and other maladies than at a lower temp. Real bad things can happen to your animals when temperatures go higher than 85-86F. How bad, depends on your tank and the condition of the animals within it. Slightly stressed animal could RTN, bleach or suffer some other ill fate if the temperature goes too high. The same animals, if conditions are different might not. For me, I have too much invested and am too interested in preserving the lives of these animals, than to risk them with higher temperatures.

Also, I feel that people with more experience in reef keeping will have better success at keeping their animals at higher temperatures. Experienced aquarists know their tank and what to look for when observing corals in a captive environment. Having said this, I feel it is bad advice to tell people who are new to the hobby that they should maintain their reefs at these high levels. Inexperience when maintaining a reef tank at high temperature has a much greater chance of disaster than recommending a lower temperature. As the person matures in their ability to maintain a tank, then if they choose, they can raise the target temperature.
 
JB NY said:
I keep my reef at 82F in the peak of summer and 78F during winter. While I am aware that some recognized people recommend keeping a reef tank at higher temperatures, as high as 85F. I choose not to, for a few reasons. Most importantly, because my tank is not a real reef in the Pacific.

Funny, but I found myself the receipient of some friendly criticism for this very thing (I keep my tank between 76.9F and 78F year round) just a couple weeks ago. The critics' declaration was that I was not maintaining, 'real reef' temps. My response was if this were a real reef, I'd be on its real beach with a real beer hoping a couple of real cuties in real thongs would be setting up a real volleyball net close by. But since I'm here talking to you, I guess both the corals and I will have to live with the disappointment of what we've got.

Another reason I choose to keep my tanks this low is to circumvent my own ineptitude. For instance, there have been two times when, after maintenance, I've forgotton to turn my chillers back on. After several hours, my temps had risen to the low 80s. Of course, any six degree temperature swing will stress the corals but can you imagine what going from, say, 82 to 88 could've done? Or 85 to 91? Fortunately, they didn't have a long term problem with the swings they had to endure.

And and speaking of long term problems, I also hear that I am doing my corals long term damage by keeping my temps this low. To that, I can only respond by pointing out the pieces I've had over 5 years now and relating my human error story above. So again, I maintain that stability moreso than some magic setting is a key to success here. After all, does anyone really think that all of their corals were collected (or aquacultured) from areas with the exact same temperature to begin with?
 
Just contemplating what the corals go through out in the ocean, I would guess that the water chemistry stays really stable, but I think temperature can take big swings, especially when tides come in and out and lagoon areas get flushed through the surrounding reefs. Not to mention areas that get low-tided.

So IMO, if any one parameter can slide, it is the constant temp one. But still, the temps should stay reasonable like always between 75Ã"šÃ‚º and 85Ã"šÃ‚º or so. My system has survived short term 90Ã"šÃ‚º whoopsies. I personally believe that water quality is 90% of the game.

(fwiw, I do like it best when my tanks are at 78Ã"šÃ‚º-79Ã"šÃ‚º, 85Ã"šÃ‚º makes me nervous for sure)
 
Hi G-Money,

Maybe you can explain what is that u things that is flowing out of water...
I have something like that but I still have these bubble...
 
The U-thing is my skimmer output.
It reduces bubbles, splash, and keeps a mostly constant backpressure on the output so the skimmer column water level doesn't fluctuate.

The tank return is in the far left compartment.
 
I completely agree with frags..

Corals have temperature swings in the wild, with tides and everything he mentioned. I think we are obssessed with keeping a locked tempearature.. Swings are okay and I would argues that 3-4 degreed swings are natural.

I have seen many pictures of huge reef shelf completely out of the water in low tide and they do fine. Now that a temp change..

Just my 2c

Mike
 
The temperature question is an interesting one ... but the point I have to raise is:

While some temp. swings would be expected in the ocean - I tend to wonder if our daily swings [in un-chilled tanks in summertime] ... done every single day ... are a problem. Sure, a couple swings a week, but a daily 78-82 swing?

I guess I fall in between. I've had swings, had things seem to not even notice ... but also feel like I've gotten best response when for a few weeks the temp never varies more than a degree, two max.

I'm on the fence with temp, I guess. Seems like some swings are ok, no problem. But yet there's got to be a point to where it's too much [never mind the chemistry changes, O2 availability changes] that vary at diff. temps.
 
I wonder if our tank kept corals...adapt to the daily tempature swings? Especaly the 3rd 4th 5th generation frags and so on.
 
JB NY said:
So here is a picture of the end of the tank a few days later. I'll clean the glass today. It's been 7 days since I last cleaned it and here is what it looks like from the end. I taped a piece of white paper and wrote "Can you read this?" on the far end 6 feet away.
*removed image*

My glass looks like that after only 24 hours from the time I cleaned it.

What can be wrong?

Here are some specs.
Ammonia, Nitrite, Nitrate=0 on seachem test kit.
Phosphate= undetectable on seachem test kit.
Alk = 9 Dkh (Salifert)
Ca= 420 (Salifert)
Mag = 1300 (Salifert)

I do a 20 gallon water change every 5-6 days (5 times a month)
(I siphon out and add in at the same time, so it's really not a complete 20g switch)
My clean up crew consists of 30 astrea snails. Tank is 40g.

My rocks are immaculate, it's just the glass., there are some spots on the back glass that I can't reach and they have become VERY green.
The algae is not hair, or the "bristley" bryopsis (sp?), just green.
No sunlight hits the tank either.

I only have three 1" long fish, so I feed sparingly, mainly frozen mysis, and frozen seaweed (emerald entree').
I do feed Cyclop ezee twice a week too.

I have been having this problem since I upgraded to this tank, which has been about 4 months, but the water quality always checks out OK.


Any ideas would be appreciated, Thanks.
 
I meet the parameters and still can't keep SPS. I'm hoping it's because my tank is only 1 year old, and with time I'll have better success.
 
Dag, not sure it's the age of your tank (since it is 1 year old) that you are having some difficulty with sps. Its definitely possible to keep them much sooner. Hope you figure it out and good luck.
 
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