Form Rob's Reef Forum.
Well I finally got some time to take some pics of my tank today 3/27/06
I did start prodibio digest/PTIM a couple of days ago.
I noticed a certain clearing of the water after adding it...looks best ive seen it.
My corals just came out of an interceptor quarantine tank (RedBugs) so they might take an xtra day or 2 to respond and readjust.
I have also started dosing Kent CoralVite for needed trace elements. My tank is just 6 months old so because of a smaller demand with my frag sized corals I am dosing the CoralVite at 1/2 recomended dosage.
Here is a link to my pics...
http://www.einsweb.com/Prodiweb/3_27_06/
Enjoy!!
einsteins
What would it take to make this a sticky. I think that this would be important because its ongoing research and people from outside of the URS are involved as well. I am sure they don't want to sort through all of our regional stuff to find what they are looking for.
quote:
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Originally posted by robthorn
... have you read the coral magazine issues 1 through 6 or 7 that deal with nutirents in the aquarium? I am through 5 of them and I need to go back and re read them a few times to really grasp everything but it is at least giving me a better understanding of what is going on ...
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Those articles are great stuff!
That being said ... they unfortunately don't really address what's going on with bacterioplankton filtration. They are an easy read, and they do present critical issues and concepts relevant to bacteriplankton filtration.
The folks who really ought to take an interest in the articles are the BB Berlin-style reefers who have achieved a "stripped nutrient" water column ... particularly article VI which specifically addresses nitrogen and phosphorous limitation in a still organic carbon-limited water column (water columns resulting from bacterioplankton filtration are fundamentally different in that they are not organic carbon-limited).
BTW, when I write about "carbon limitation", I am referring specifically to DOC ("dissolved organic carbon") ... Not DIC ("dissolved inorganic carbon"). The distinction between organic vs. inorganic carbon limitation is significant. There is simply no way for a viable reef aquarium to be inorganic carbon limited ... think about how much CO2 and HCO3 (among others) is present.
JMO.
If you haven't come across Jorg Kokott's "Nutrients in the Reef Aquarium" articles, they are definitely worth a read ...
Nutrients in the Reef Aquarium - Part I
(Coral magazine, February/March 2004)
The fundamentals about nutrients and their concentration in seawater.
Nutrients in the Reef Aquarium - Part II
(Coral magazine, April/May 2004)
Feeding mechanisms of zooxanthellae corals - a concept based on symbiosis.
Nutrients in the Reef Aquarium - Part III
(Coral magazine, June/July 2004)
Feeding zooxanthellate corals.
Nutrients in the Reef Aquarium - Part IV
(Coral magazine, August/September 2004)
The Biological Function and Turnover of Nutrients.
Nutrients in the Reef Aquarium - Part V
(Coral magazine, December 2004/January 2005)
Iron - An Essential Metal We Know Nothing About.
Nutrients in the Reef Aquarium - Part VI
(Coral magazine, February/March 2005)
Understanding the Concept of the Nutrient-Limited Reef Aquarium.
Here's the website for Coral magazine ...
http://www.coralmagazine.com
Here's the "back issues" page of Coral magazine's website ...
http://www.coralmagazine.com/backIssues.htm
Here's Coral magazine's "contact us" page of CORAL magazine's website ...
http://www.coralmagazine.com/contactUs.htm
Also ...
Coral magazine's Advertising Sales Department:
1011 South Linwood Avenue
Santa Ana, CA 92705
Phone: 714-543-4100
FAX: 714-543-4800
Scott