Paul B
Premium Member
I have read on a few forums that some tanks are having a problem with Old Tank Syndrome.
Old Tank Syndrome has no real scientific cause and is believed to be caused by a number of reasons, some of which are lack of maintenance, metal acumulation, compacted pores in rock, lack of bio diversity etc, but it generally means "Failure to Thrive".
Some times no matter what you do, the animals just seem to decline to where the hobbiest just gives up and takes up stamp collecting.
I have some experience with an old tank and I think I know the causes and the things that "Most" but not all people can do to prevent it.
Our tanks are taken care of by bacteria, not us. Bacteria do it all and we are just there to keep the bacteria happy.
I feel there are simple and cheap ways to keep the bacteria happy while not using all sorts of un-natural chemicals to remove substances that bacteria are willing to do for free.
But the bacteria need a little help to stay happy and healthy.
Nothing will last without maintenance so my ideas incorporate a little maintenance, but very little and only a few times a year.
I am sorry to say that if you run a DSB I don't think there is a way to prevent "OTS" for much more than ten years.
Ten years may seem like a long time if you are 20 years old, it is twice your age. But ten years is not even the lifespan of a hermit crab. it is a little less than half the age of most damsels and just twice the age of a seahorse, so ten years is just a blink of the eye for most of us.
A reef tank can last forever just as it does in the sea.
The sea is a little different than our captive reefs for a few reasons. Most of us use ASW. ASW is an aproximation of real seawater but unfortunately many people don't have access to the sea. ASW can work fine but natural is much better. NSW has every mineral on earth and near space incorporated in it and we are not certain if any of those trace elements are beneficial or detrimental, but our animals evolved in it so how bad can it be?
Besides NSW the sea has other things that are more difficult to mimic, one of them is volume. In the sea the vast majority of the water is to deep to grow algae so any nitrate produced has plenty of room to go to get diluted. The rest of the nitrate in the shallow water is processed by bacteria and algae. The reefs are loaded with algae, we just don't see it because of the hoards of tangs, urchins, snails, slugs, sea hares, chitens etc. That will not work in our tank because of that water volume thing.
On any rocky shore in the tropics you will see forests of algae. It grows at the water's edge because very few animals can live there. There are only snails and Sally Light foot crabs along with amphipods that can live there.
Algae is one of natures best nitrate processors and even if you don't see algae, the sea is loaded with phytoplankton, that is how the oxygen on this planet got here.
The other thing the sea has is typhoons. Typhoons and lightning.
I have been in a typhoon in the South Pacific and a Hurricane in the Caribbean. There is no way your turkey baster or Eheim filter can stir the water like a typhoon.:eek2:
If you dumped out your entire tank on a tile floor and put everything back into the tank 7 or 8 times, that would still not impact the corals as much as a typhoon in a shallow sea.
I have seen brain corals as large as my house, up side down. I have seen 40' sailboats 50' up on the side of a mountain surrounded by 8' seafans.
Try to move that boat with your turkey baster.
What I am trying to say is that our corals evolved with typhoons and they need it. Maybe not directly but that violence uncovers bare areas for corals to grow, it drags tiny invertabrates from hiding so they can be eaten, it causes bacteria from the land to mix with the bacteria in the sea, It opens pores and larger channels in rock to allow oxygen to penetrate giving rise to more bacteria. It does initially kill many corals, but from that devastation, new corals take up the space making for more diversity.:worried:
If it were not for these weather upheavels, the reefs would stagnate and be covered with detritus, the corals would take up all the available space and only the strongest would live forcing any other coral to die and most important, the bacteria will be reduced to just a few types and they would only live on the surfaces of the rock because the pores would be filled with detritus.
Thphoons also violently stir the water to such an extent that as it crashes on the rocks it is throw up into a fine mist where it is exposed to the abundance of ozone caused by the numerous lightning that continousely hits the water. Some of these lightning storms are so fierce that you can barely open your eyes from the flashes. It does get very violent.:uzi:
So that is my start to an Old Tank Syndrome thread. I will try to get into "my" ideas to prevent it when I have more time.
Feel free to post your ideas, criticisms or aprovals or just tell me to go away, as I am old and getting tired of typing. :smokin:
Old Tank Syndrome has no real scientific cause and is believed to be caused by a number of reasons, some of which are lack of maintenance, metal acumulation, compacted pores in rock, lack of bio diversity etc, but it generally means "Failure to Thrive".
Some times no matter what you do, the animals just seem to decline to where the hobbiest just gives up and takes up stamp collecting.
I have some experience with an old tank and I think I know the causes and the things that "Most" but not all people can do to prevent it.
Our tanks are taken care of by bacteria, not us. Bacteria do it all and we are just there to keep the bacteria happy.
I feel there are simple and cheap ways to keep the bacteria happy while not using all sorts of un-natural chemicals to remove substances that bacteria are willing to do for free.
But the bacteria need a little help to stay happy and healthy.
Nothing will last without maintenance so my ideas incorporate a little maintenance, but very little and only a few times a year.
I am sorry to say that if you run a DSB I don't think there is a way to prevent "OTS" for much more than ten years.
Ten years may seem like a long time if you are 20 years old, it is twice your age. But ten years is not even the lifespan of a hermit crab. it is a little less than half the age of most damsels and just twice the age of a seahorse, so ten years is just a blink of the eye for most of us.
A reef tank can last forever just as it does in the sea.
The sea is a little different than our captive reefs for a few reasons. Most of us use ASW. ASW is an aproximation of real seawater but unfortunately many people don't have access to the sea. ASW can work fine but natural is much better. NSW has every mineral on earth and near space incorporated in it and we are not certain if any of those trace elements are beneficial or detrimental, but our animals evolved in it so how bad can it be?
Besides NSW the sea has other things that are more difficult to mimic, one of them is volume. In the sea the vast majority of the water is to deep to grow algae so any nitrate produced has plenty of room to go to get diluted. The rest of the nitrate in the shallow water is processed by bacteria and algae. The reefs are loaded with algae, we just don't see it because of the hoards of tangs, urchins, snails, slugs, sea hares, chitens etc. That will not work in our tank because of that water volume thing.
On any rocky shore in the tropics you will see forests of algae. It grows at the water's edge because very few animals can live there. There are only snails and Sally Light foot crabs along with amphipods that can live there.
Algae is one of natures best nitrate processors and even if you don't see algae, the sea is loaded with phytoplankton, that is how the oxygen on this planet got here.
The other thing the sea has is typhoons. Typhoons and lightning.
I have been in a typhoon in the South Pacific and a Hurricane in the Caribbean. There is no way your turkey baster or Eheim filter can stir the water like a typhoon.:eek2:
If you dumped out your entire tank on a tile floor and put everything back into the tank 7 or 8 times, that would still not impact the corals as much as a typhoon in a shallow sea.
I have seen brain corals as large as my house, up side down. I have seen 40' sailboats 50' up on the side of a mountain surrounded by 8' seafans.
Try to move that boat with your turkey baster.
What I am trying to say is that our corals evolved with typhoons and they need it. Maybe not directly but that violence uncovers bare areas for corals to grow, it drags tiny invertabrates from hiding so they can be eaten, it causes bacteria from the land to mix with the bacteria in the sea, It opens pores and larger channels in rock to allow oxygen to penetrate giving rise to more bacteria. It does initially kill many corals, but from that devastation, new corals take up the space making for more diversity.:worried:
If it were not for these weather upheavels, the reefs would stagnate and be covered with detritus, the corals would take up all the available space and only the strongest would live forcing any other coral to die and most important, the bacteria will be reduced to just a few types and they would only live on the surfaces of the rock because the pores would be filled with detritus.

Thphoons also violently stir the water to such an extent that as it crashes on the rocks it is throw up into a fine mist where it is exposed to the abundance of ozone caused by the numerous lightning that continousely hits the water. Some of these lightning storms are so fierce that you can barely open your eyes from the flashes. It does get very violent.:uzi:
So that is my start to an Old Tank Syndrome thread. I will try to get into "my" ideas to prevent it when I have more time.
Feel free to post your ideas, criticisms or aprovals or just tell me to go away, as I am old and getting tired of typing. :smokin: