Reef Bass
colors and textures
I am coming to the conclusion that it may be time to replace my sandbed. It is 5 1/2 years old. I realize this is a subject of some controversy. My beliefs are that a sandbed not only looks good but can be of benefit to water quality at least until it becomes filled with noxious compounds and needs to be replaced.
The reason I think it is time is because I am noticing the onset of some disturbing "symptoms" or issues which I haven't had with the same tank and equipment in the last five years.
The biggest issue I'm noticing is that nuisance algae of various types are taking hold and increasing in quantity. I am experiencing a lot of a light green algae which tends to form a sheet on the sandbed and produce gas / bubbles. Not the usual dark green Valonia bubble algae which is like little dark green plastic bubbles but a light green velvety textured algae. It also likes to form on rocks around the tank. The good news is that when it gets to a sheet like state, I can vacuum up the entire sheet and peel it off the rock or sand easily.
I am also getting a dark colored deep reddish black brown algae forming on the rim of my purple rim green monti cap in the highest current area of the tank!
My lps and sps tanks share the same water system, and in my barebottom lps tank I am getting prodigous production of hair algae and other marine flora.
So that's three different algaes which are growing like mad with which I haven't had issues in the last five years with this same tank and equipment.
Ok, that's what I'm seeing. What I've been doing about it is micro target siphoning algae out, so there's an active export process. But the Super Hideous Invasive Trash keeps growing back, which to me means there is an ongoing nutrient source for these items.
Water quality - I strive to maintain my tanks with calcium 425, alk 9, mag 1300, nitrites / trates and phosphate at 0. My last test last week put my calcium at 400, alk 8.8, nitrates 5 and phosphates 0.
I find it odd that I have algae issues with nitrates 5 and phosphates 0, as I've had nitrates of more than 10 before without significant algae problems. My understanding of "old sandbed syndrome" is that this is one of the signs (lots of algae with low standard nutrient tests results).
The question of "well, what have you changed recently" is relevant. The biggest recent changes have been the addition of my lps tank to the water system, my having adopted a reasonably consistent lps feeding strategy and my having automated my dosing.
I don't think the addition of my lps tank (60g 48x24x12) to my exisiting 100g water system is the cause. If anything, that should help, because I have 50%+ more water with the same stock level.
Clearly overfeeding my lps could be a cause of unwanted algae production. However, if that were the case, I would expect the usual nitrate and phosphate water tests to show elevated levels, which they don't. Plus I'm target feeding only twice a week and only what the polyps actually consume. There's not a pile of uneaten food left over. And most of the time I come back about 12 hours later and siphon out any acan poop - digested remains that have been expelled after the polyp has consumed what it wants. So I doubt this is the cause of my algae woes. And of course my fabulous EuroReef skimmer is skimming 24/7/365.
If my feeding were overwhelming my skimmer, I would expect to see a significant increase in skimmate production (haven't seen it) and also elevated NO3 and PO4 levels, which I don't.
Automating my dosing of ca, alk and mg has resulted in more stable and consistent parameters, which has made my corals very happy. I don't think this would necessarily cause an increase in nuisance algae production.
If you're still with me, thanks for reading so far!
That's why I think my sandbed needs to be replaced. Here's how I plan to do it. I am very concerned about a cycle and ammonia / nitrite spike. The last thing I want to do is kill my corals for sure by trying to replace the sandbed that is maybe causing me issues.
I am thinking about adding a shallow (1-2") sandbed to my lps tank. Being an lps tank there isn't enough flow to keep debris suspended in the water column until it can be removed in the sump, so the barebottom thing isn't working for me. I'm thinking that adding live sand and waiting a month before proceeding will give the lps tank sandbed time to build up enough bacteria to help moderate a potential cycle spike in the sps tank.
Then, in a long day, I plan to fill buckets with existing tank water and put my corals and rocks in them while I empty out the 100g sps tank, remove the old sand, add new live sand and replace rock and corals. That's going to be a ton of good smelling fun.
While I am confident about the mechanics of removing and replacing the sandbed, I am not sure about what will happen after it has been completed. Will there be a monster coral killing ammonia spike afterwards as the new sand cycles? Or will the spike not be too bad being in an established system and with the sand in my lps tank helping to keep elevated levels under control? Do you even think my accelerating issues with various algaes are due to old possibly nasty sandbed?
Thanks for reading all this. As you can tell I've given the issue some thought and would appreciate hearing from those who have grappled with similar issues. What do you think?
The reason I think it is time is because I am noticing the onset of some disturbing "symptoms" or issues which I haven't had with the same tank and equipment in the last five years.
The biggest issue I'm noticing is that nuisance algae of various types are taking hold and increasing in quantity. I am experiencing a lot of a light green algae which tends to form a sheet on the sandbed and produce gas / bubbles. Not the usual dark green Valonia bubble algae which is like little dark green plastic bubbles but a light green velvety textured algae. It also likes to form on rocks around the tank. The good news is that when it gets to a sheet like state, I can vacuum up the entire sheet and peel it off the rock or sand easily.
I am also getting a dark colored deep reddish black brown algae forming on the rim of my purple rim green monti cap in the highest current area of the tank!
My lps and sps tanks share the same water system, and in my barebottom lps tank I am getting prodigous production of hair algae and other marine flora.
So that's three different algaes which are growing like mad with which I haven't had issues in the last five years with this same tank and equipment.
Ok, that's what I'm seeing. What I've been doing about it is micro target siphoning algae out, so there's an active export process. But the Super Hideous Invasive Trash keeps growing back, which to me means there is an ongoing nutrient source for these items.
Water quality - I strive to maintain my tanks with calcium 425, alk 9, mag 1300, nitrites / trates and phosphate at 0. My last test last week put my calcium at 400, alk 8.8, nitrates 5 and phosphates 0.
I find it odd that I have algae issues with nitrates 5 and phosphates 0, as I've had nitrates of more than 10 before without significant algae problems. My understanding of "old sandbed syndrome" is that this is one of the signs (lots of algae with low standard nutrient tests results).
The question of "well, what have you changed recently" is relevant. The biggest recent changes have been the addition of my lps tank to the water system, my having adopted a reasonably consistent lps feeding strategy and my having automated my dosing.
I don't think the addition of my lps tank (60g 48x24x12) to my exisiting 100g water system is the cause. If anything, that should help, because I have 50%+ more water with the same stock level.
Clearly overfeeding my lps could be a cause of unwanted algae production. However, if that were the case, I would expect the usual nitrate and phosphate water tests to show elevated levels, which they don't. Plus I'm target feeding only twice a week and only what the polyps actually consume. There's not a pile of uneaten food left over. And most of the time I come back about 12 hours later and siphon out any acan poop - digested remains that have been expelled after the polyp has consumed what it wants. So I doubt this is the cause of my algae woes. And of course my fabulous EuroReef skimmer is skimming 24/7/365.
If my feeding were overwhelming my skimmer, I would expect to see a significant increase in skimmate production (haven't seen it) and also elevated NO3 and PO4 levels, which I don't.
Automating my dosing of ca, alk and mg has resulted in more stable and consistent parameters, which has made my corals very happy. I don't think this would necessarily cause an increase in nuisance algae production.
If you're still with me, thanks for reading so far!
That's why I think my sandbed needs to be replaced. Here's how I plan to do it. I am very concerned about a cycle and ammonia / nitrite spike. The last thing I want to do is kill my corals for sure by trying to replace the sandbed that is maybe causing me issues.
I am thinking about adding a shallow (1-2") sandbed to my lps tank. Being an lps tank there isn't enough flow to keep debris suspended in the water column until it can be removed in the sump, so the barebottom thing isn't working for me. I'm thinking that adding live sand and waiting a month before proceeding will give the lps tank sandbed time to build up enough bacteria to help moderate a potential cycle spike in the sps tank.
Then, in a long day, I plan to fill buckets with existing tank water and put my corals and rocks in them while I empty out the 100g sps tank, remove the old sand, add new live sand and replace rock and corals. That's going to be a ton of good smelling fun.

While I am confident about the mechanics of removing and replacing the sandbed, I am not sure about what will happen after it has been completed. Will there be a monster coral killing ammonia spike afterwards as the new sand cycles? Or will the spike not be too bad being in an established system and with the sand in my lps tank helping to keep elevated levels under control? Do you even think my accelerating issues with various algaes are due to old possibly nasty sandbed?
Thanks for reading all this. As you can tell I've given the issue some thought and would appreciate hearing from those who have grappled with similar issues. What do you think?