Entomophage
New member
I've got a new system in the works, and I'm interested in learning more about culturing plankton (and other live foods) to feed my reef.
I'd like to simulate natural feeding conditions for inverts and fish as closely as possible, and it seems the best approach would be to culture phyto -> zooplankton cultures, as well as larger food organisms like pods. Additionally, I'd like to automate a dosing system to introduce food organisms to my reef on a steady, continual basis.
What are the pitfalls of dosing culture water straight to the reef? I imagine the culture medium itself is fairly high in nutrients, but is this significant in the volume we're talking about? What about trapping and moving pods from my refugium to the display? Has anyone experimented with a pod trap connected to a dosing pump?
The end result I have in mind would basically be a high nutrient import system which would need to be balanced by equally high exports. Heavy skimming would almost certainly work against the goal of keeping microscopic food organisms suspended in the water column, but perhaps with a combination of a refugium, ATS and skimming (periodic skimming on a schedule opposite plankton feedings?) a balance could be maintained.
I'm excited to hear of other's experience with this, or if a purely live-food reef has ever been attempted. There's an article by Eric Borneman ( http://www.reefkeeping.com/issues/2002-07/eb/index.php) in which he quotes Dr. Ron Shimek as saying the food availability in a wild reef would translate to feeding 250-350 mL of wet food per 100g daily. How close can the hobbyist get to balancing this level of import/export?
I'd like to simulate natural feeding conditions for inverts and fish as closely as possible, and it seems the best approach would be to culture phyto -> zooplankton cultures, as well as larger food organisms like pods. Additionally, I'd like to automate a dosing system to introduce food organisms to my reef on a steady, continual basis.
What are the pitfalls of dosing culture water straight to the reef? I imagine the culture medium itself is fairly high in nutrients, but is this significant in the volume we're talking about? What about trapping and moving pods from my refugium to the display? Has anyone experimented with a pod trap connected to a dosing pump?
The end result I have in mind would basically be a high nutrient import system which would need to be balanced by equally high exports. Heavy skimming would almost certainly work against the goal of keeping microscopic food organisms suspended in the water column, but perhaps with a combination of a refugium, ATS and skimming (periodic skimming on a schedule opposite plankton feedings?) a balance could be maintained.
I'm excited to hear of other's experience with this, or if a purely live-food reef has ever been attempted. There's an article by Eric Borneman ( http://www.reefkeeping.com/issues/2002-07/eb/index.php) in which he quotes Dr. Ron Shimek as saying the food availability in a wild reef would translate to feeding 250-350 mL of wet food per 100g daily. How close can the hobbyist get to balancing this level of import/export?