http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/fa157
This is a neat link to formal studies on 35% peroxide use in freshwater systems, its neat because it reflects on a few repeating patterns we see in these anecdotal reef peroxide threads:
-Again we have lists of sensitive vs tolerant species supported even if it is just for freshwater, any experiment involving peroxide begins to reveal unique tolerances that are strikingly consistent across treatments even with non exacting experiment controls (for example, coral banded shrimp across these reef tanks have never had a reported loss vs lysmata cleaners that show a dieoff in ~80% of treated tanks by any method-your cbs is safe, your skunk cleaner is not)
-a species of dinoflagellate is a known target in this study, we easily beat dinoflagellates in the reef tank with peroxide thats interesting albeit nonspecific
it was just nice to see any type of peer-reviewed work on peroxide fighting a dinoflagellate of any kind since we see the outcome and measure it in these threads
-its a commonly used aquaculture tool, as previously stated
-there is a legitimacy in working with this substance in our reef tanks regardless of negative assumptions. Peel the skin off the onion so to speak, the inner layers are more interesting not less. Something has to explain the pictures we've collected here, we're on to something. Justin Credabel was onto something when he made the general introduction in the reef builders thread.
I see these peroxide threads as tuning up for a potential game changer in reefkeeping. More links to come. Matt on 3reef.com algae forums just made a nice documentation thread for his run as well, check it out. The more info we collect and 'tune', the fewer pests we'll be losing tanks to
B