Reefin' Dude
New member
it is all about the largest phosphate sink in the system. the larger the phosphate sink the longer one can wait between water changes. a good depth DSB can bind a lot of phosphates.
not going several years without water changes does not sound that surprising if one knows what is going on in the substrate. it is all good and fine until the substrate reaches maximum capacity, then the fun starts to happen. depending on the organisms and the trophic environment one wants to emulate. if a system is a softie system, then water changes and the like are not nearly as important. the system is meant to be eutrophic. the opposite is true for SPS. as the substrate runs out of binding sites the nutrient levels go up and the greater the need for phosphates to be sunk using other methods. whether that is another DSB somewhere else, GFO, ATS, whatever. the bigger the sink the bigger the amount of phosphates that can be held onto.
Floyd R Turbo- how deep is your substrate? what corals are you keeping? from reading the boards. a substrate phosphate sink seems to last about a year for every inch of depth. i would not be surprised about your results unless you say your substrate is less than 3" deep. though the fact that you are able to grow an ATS is already showing that your substrate is reaching saturation. less and less phosphates are able to be bound within the substrate, more and more are becoming available to other organisms. if your phosphates were truly zero, than you would not be able to grow the ATS.
no matter how much light you have on a screen of plastic, if the nutrients are there, than the algae will not grow. if you are keeping a eutrophic softie system, than the ATS can be used as a great biomarker for determining where you are on the trophic scale for keeping the corals happy. if you are keeping SPS, than the ATS growing algae is just a sign that the system is becoming eutrophic.
G~
not going several years without water changes does not sound that surprising if one knows what is going on in the substrate. it is all good and fine until the substrate reaches maximum capacity, then the fun starts to happen. depending on the organisms and the trophic environment one wants to emulate. if a system is a softie system, then water changes and the like are not nearly as important. the system is meant to be eutrophic. the opposite is true for SPS. as the substrate runs out of binding sites the nutrient levels go up and the greater the need for phosphates to be sunk using other methods. whether that is another DSB somewhere else, GFO, ATS, whatever. the bigger the sink the bigger the amount of phosphates that can be held onto.
Floyd R Turbo- how deep is your substrate? what corals are you keeping? from reading the boards. a substrate phosphate sink seems to last about a year for every inch of depth. i would not be surprised about your results unless you say your substrate is less than 3" deep. though the fact that you are able to grow an ATS is already showing that your substrate is reaching saturation. less and less phosphates are able to be bound within the substrate, more and more are becoming available to other organisms. if your phosphates were truly zero, than you would not be able to grow the ATS.
G~