What the manufacturer didn’t tell you about using np pellets(polymers)
The theory behind the pellets is that they produce bacteria. The bacteria consume nitrates and phosphates and they themselves are consumed by corals.
Well fed corals colour up and thrive;the water becomes crystal clear.
This is where the theory stops short . Use of these pellets in six systems has caused a variety of problems leaving me with extra maintenance, unhappy and impatient customers, and a lot of explaining to do.
In Practicality
The pellets will reduce nitrates almost immediately and act like a floc pulling detritus out of the water and thus giving an almost instantaneous clarity. However the pellets fall short in how long it takes them to reduce phosphates.
Once the nitrates are reduced in your system algae that thrived very easily on them diminishes. This leaves the door open for other nuisance algae that was in competition before for nitrates and kept in check, yet has the capacity to flourish on phosphates. Namely bryopsis (hair algae) and cyano and other slime algae .
They have the capacity to pull phosphates from reef rock which over the years can form a hard paste with carbonates.
These algae are ugly, smell and can easily suffocate corals and drain the system of quality oxygen.
In four out of six tanks that I experimented with np pellets, this has been the case. It is a lot of work to take out reef rock and scrub it, similarly try to save corals that are covered in bryopsis.
Ever have to carefully clean off a sea fan or branch coral by hand that seem to be magnets for gathering bryopsis . I spent an hour on one just today.
If you add too much of the np pellets too fast then you can get a bacteria bloom. Left unchecked a bacteria bloom can seriously and quickly rob the system of vital oxygen and drive down the pH of the system.
Again I have had to deal with a bacteria bloom in a couple of the tanks---by setting up aeration, water changes, and in one case discontinuing the np pellets
What is evolving with experienced users of the pellets is that phosban should be run separately in conjunction with the first couple of months use of the pellets.
Running carbon and a protein skimmer is a must to handle the dead bacteria.
So now you have a reactor with carbon, a reactor with phosban and a reactor with the pellets---and a protein skimmer all hanging around on the outside of the tank. This is a very hard sell to my customers.
What the bacteria does do is form a mulm---a mixture ofdissolved np pellets and rapidly reproducing bacteria. One reefers suggested they call it bacteria snot—a good description in my opinion. This mulm can cause problems---it clogs the reactor and the filters in the reactor. It can coat corals that do not have the ability to produce their own mucous to ward off being coated by this mulm. They soon suffocate or can’t feed and die. This mulm can cause clumping in the reactor and the reactor has to be take down, the pellets rinsed an number of times till no more snot is realeased—another time consumer.
I have also heard from experts that the usefulness of this bacteria to corals is questionable. Although concrete research on bacteria produced from polymers is limited their experience questions it,
A better suggestion then the pellets-- reef keeping 101
Run carbon and phosban. If you don’t want reactors hanging about a simple Rena Canister filter with all other media taken out except a phosban pack and a carbon pack. This will do wonders for the clarity of your water and the control of nuisance algaes.
Maintain your live rock. Blast it once a week with a turkey baster. Get that detritus away from the rock and up into the water column where it can be filtered off. Move a couple of pieces of live rock around monthly
And guess who eats detritus—corals!
Maintain excellent circulation and flow. Creative placement of power heads can insure the water flow takes a circular flow from top to substrate, across the substrate and back up to the top of the reef. Flow should be a minimum of 20 times the volume of the display tank in gph.
10 per cent water changes performed weekly.
Set up and automatic feeder esp in the case of constant grazers such as tangs. The feeder can control the amount and time interval to feed the fish. This insures the feed is consumed at each feeding
Take care of your sand bed. Studies have shown that even a one inch sand bed is capable of reducing nitrates if the flora and fauna in the top level is constantly maintained. This means reducing the number of carnivores that ravage the sand bed----necessarius snails, sand sifting stars, hermit crabs.
Rinse all frozen food introduced to your tank---they contain phosphates in the juice—and nothing eats the juice in your tank.