fishes2889
In Memoriam
NANO of the month......wait of the YEAR!!
thumbs up for louist!
Steve
thumbs up for louist!
Steve
Acropora, no. They will be fragged if they shade the ones lower down, and I'll use them as frags in trades, or just give them away to budding reefers. I give my zoanthids away all the time.Will your acropora's and clam eventually outgrow your tank
I don't exact keep a log book, but one must keep in mind that corals are cheap in Australia. We really need to work hard to get nice pieces, but here in Syd, no one in their right mind would fork out more than USD$40 for a colorful fist-sized colony. We are just not used to expensive corals. I do a lot of trading with fellow reefers, but I also have the advantage of being able to offer some tank photography in return for a few nice frags. I guess I have been "brought up" by the people with mature tanks and are generous with frags and thus I tend to give overflows away too. No big deal.You must have spent a fortune
I do a 30% WC every weekend. I dose the equivalent of 15ppm of calcium + almost 60mg/L of carbonate per day. This maintains the Ca at 420ppm and kH at 120ppm. This will soon to switched over to kalk because dosing 2 separate things is just a pain, and was a lot of hassle to find the balancing point. I expect the kalk to provide further stability, but I will start when I get a replacement kH and Ca test kit.how offen do you do water changes and are you dosing cal and alk? how do you keep them stable for sps?
I assume computational biology doesn’t involve a lot of husbandry.
I got mine off Ebay without the controller for something like USD$45 so I say it is $45-worth-it, but if I had to pay retail, then I would say don't bother, just add another fan. The advantage of the IceProbe is the chiling effect without evaporation. I use it in combination with a 80mm fan and they do a good job. I do leave the lights off during mid day if the weather man predicts a mid 30's C.How happy are you with the top mount of the thermoelectric chiller. I just got one myself and assumed I would drill for it. Does that last half inch at the base get cold?
Actually no, that's not the same thing. Pathogens are not always in situ. My previous point being that if there isn't a pathogenic strain, increased temperature doesn't neccessarily cause bleaching events. The GBR reaches 30C during mid day in summer, and anyone who goes diving will also tell you the large variations in water temperature.Maybe I'm splitting hairs, but even if the host isn’t directly affected by temp fluctuations and secondary organisms become pathogenic, isn’t that the same thing? I definitely subscribe to the theory that pathogens are always in situ and over stressing hosts allows them to express.