The ocean is not without sand, therefore a small sandbox in tank may be required.
Do you mean remote sand box?
The ocean is not without sand, therefore a small sandbox in tank may be required.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10541829#post10541829 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by boxfishpooalot
Well Bombers tank won my attention. Those reefers with poor colors probably are lacking food that sandbeds produce(detritus, pods, nitrate/phosphate) the key to fixing this is to balance out everything.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10541948#post10541948 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by King-Kong
The question of "BB vs. DSB" is more than aesthetics. Read the standard literature and common FAQs out there on the web for tanks, and then try it with a BB and watch how you fail (my first stab at BB failed because of this).
Most of the advice, hardware, and techniques are not geared for BB tanks. They are geared for DSB tanks and selling lifestock/merchandise.
These are very cartoonish and unrealistic ideas of reef ecology. They're hardly strong arguments for one method over another.the thing people dont realize is that on the coral reef sand never sits in one spot it moves around a lot. One day its in hawaii, the next year it made it to austrailias reefs, and all of its detritus with it. Our tanks beds dont function like this at all.
Even where sps corals are predominant, the water is so strong that sand does not stay put. Its called the reef crest. Closer to shore, with alot less sps, is sand and algae, especially eel grass and caulerpas. I wonder why? Because its the sand supplying lots of nutrients to the plants(ie-detritus)
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10543989#post10543989 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by The Reefer91
i think people should stop bashing each others methods. the idea that it is not natural for corals to be in a place with sand is a bit far-fetched, and the idea that SPS need sand is also ridiculous. both methods(DSB and BB) have one characteristic in common. if you don't research it, your tank will crash and burn in front of your eyes.
some of the arguement is also aesthetics. some like sand, some don't. but the arguement that some people make with phrasing such as "no sand, no decomposing" is ludacris and absurd. it's all a matter of research. i've seen alot of successful BB tanks, but there are just as many successful DSB and SSB tanks to match it. i like sand, so my opinion is a little bias, but i will also end up trying out a BB tank as well. i think there is no evidence to show that one method is better than the other.
sorry to rant, but there have been so many threads with this topic that evolve into wars, reefers insulting each others husbandry, it just gets out of hand.
and on a lighter note, the weather is beautiful here in Northern VA![]()
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10545098#post10545098 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by boxfishpooalot
greenbean, explain to us how it all works then![]()
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10541948#post10541948 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by King-Kong
The question of "BB vs. DSB" is more than aesthetics. Read the standard literature and common FAQs out there on the web for tanks, and then try it with a BB and watch how you fail (my first stab at BB failed because of this).
Most of the advice, hardware, and techniques are not geared for BB tanks. They are geared for DSB tanks and selling lifestock/merchandise.
Going BB requires different (and mostly less) hardware, less live rock, and typically more fish and feeding.
BB also allows you to get away with a ton less conistancy than DSB tanks (such as fluctations in SG, pH, temperature).
I will say one disclaimer; some people (Like Rich) advocate a kind of hybrid theory when using sand that incorporates a lot of BB theory. The overwhelming amount of advice and hobby literature, however, does not.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10546991#post10546991 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by King-Kong
BB tanks require less light than their DSB counterparts. BB tanks can easily be sustained without MH for SPS corals, and most BB users have to cut back their MH photoperiods to amounts as low as 3hrs.