Instant Stability or Gradual Progresssion
Instant Stability or Gradual Progresssion
It is easy to see that setting up an instantly stable, mature system is possible. This is true simply by virtue of the fact that stable, mature systems exist. So, if I take everything from one 55 gal tank and move it to the same positions in another 55 gal tank, transfer the water, lights, etc. it is instantly mature and stable! Now there would be complications if you moved something inherently unstable like anaerobic sand, but gravel with lots of burrowing creatures can be safely transferred.
If I am setting up a new tank I will use mostly new substrate and just seed it with maybe 5% to 10% “living†substrate. I will also reduce costs by starting most of the tank with tufa, lava rock, or some similar porous rock and seeding the tank with a small number of live rocks from a mature tank. If this is done and more plant mass is added than animal mass, the tank will be stable chemically from day one.
This can be done with bare-bottom tanks for a short time as well. Earlier this year I experimented with the technique for a fish only hospital tank. I kept a bicolor angel, flame angel (these particular fish are friends), a percula clown, an orchid dottyback, and a yellow tang in a 20 gal bare-bottom tank for a month while treating them for ich with half salt (1.012). A single, initially 10 inch long strand of grape caluerpa provided filtration using a 65W 10,000K PC light. I protected the caluerpa from the fish with a plastic mesh. Don’t let them eat the filter! The calerupa grew to about 14 inches. If it had taken longer for all the ich to die some maintenance may have been required, but as it was daily testing did not indicate heightened ammonia, nitrite, or nitrate.
If you are setting up a new tank and cannot provide mature live rock, substrate, and live plants, or do not balance the mini ecosystem perfectly you will see the algae cycle to some degree. However my experience is that it is not to hard to avoid it because you just have to overkill on the number of plants. If you do it right the chemistry should be ok for corals on the first day.
If you fill up with dead “live†rock you just bought, don’t include any plants, and use wimpy lights, then all the normal rules apply. It will take a long time for chemistry to stabilize. And unless you have significant plant/algae growth that you allow somewhere the chemistry will never stabilize. This is because bacteria populations are never stable. Thus, with unstable chemistry you will be forced to skim and/or water change to fix it.
For those contemplating changing to a skimmerless or water changeless system that are unsure if they have enough plants I say just try it for a while and test your water. If you have trouble you can always turn on your skimmer and do a water change, which is what you would have been doing anyway!