Re: a million gallon per day water change per cubic meter on a natural reef.
I have read that as well and noted it. I find it a useful way to get a sense of the vastness of water in coral's natural environments and the amount of new ocean water corals in nature receive as compared to a reef tank. It aslo helps in understanding the why various water parameters are so readily constant in natural reef environments and difficult in closed systems.
I was skeptical of this number but after thinking about it, it seems very reasonable.
To move a million gallons of water per day through a sqaure meter window would require movement of about 2 inches per second ( about 5 cm per second).
The math:
2 inches per second x 86,400 seconds per day=172,800 inches per day.
172,800 inches divided by 39.27inches per meter=4,400 meters per day.
4,400 cubic meters @ 233 gallons each=1,025,200 gallons per day.
The following link includes flow rates for reef environments:
http://www.reefland.com/rho/2006/03/water_movement_reef_aquarium.php
From it:
Typical flow rates from various reef environments, after Sebens, et. al. (1997, 1998)
Reef Area Typical Flow speed
Reef crest, fast currents, wave surge 7 - 34 cm/sec, up to 1m/sec
Lagoon 1 - 16 cm/sec
Deep fore-reef (deeper than 25 m) <5 cm/sec
Mid- to deep fore-reef 5 â€"œ 7 cm/sec, or less
Shallow fore-reef 9 â€"œ 16 cm/sec
5cm(2inches per sec )
does not appear to be a bad average assumption for the million gallon per day rhetoric in my opinion.
I have read that as well and noted it. I find it a useful way to get a sense of the vastness of water in coral's natural environments and the amount of new ocean water corals in nature receive as compared to a reef tank. It aslo helps in understanding the why various water parameters are so readily constant in natural reef environments and difficult in closed systems.
I was skeptical of this number but after thinking about it, it seems very reasonable.
To move a million gallons of water per day through a sqaure meter window would require movement of about 2 inches per second ( about 5 cm per second).
The math:
2 inches per second x 86,400 seconds per day=172,800 inches per day.
172,800 inches divided by 39.27inches per meter=4,400 meters per day.
4,400 cubic meters @ 233 gallons each=1,025,200 gallons per day.
The following link includes flow rates for reef environments:
http://www.reefland.com/rho/2006/03/water_movement_reef_aquarium.php
From it:
Typical flow rates from various reef environments, after Sebens, et. al. (1997, 1998)
Reef Area Typical Flow speed
Reef crest, fast currents, wave surge 7 - 34 cm/sec, up to 1m/sec
Lagoon 1 - 16 cm/sec
Deep fore-reef (deeper than 25 m) <5 cm/sec
Mid- to deep fore-reef 5 â€"œ 7 cm/sec, or less
Shallow fore-reef 9 â€"œ 16 cm/sec
5cm(2inches per sec )
does not appear to be a bad average assumption for the million gallon per day rhetoric in my opinion.