Samala
New member
I'm in the midst of planning a seagrass bed only tank, which seems to be a bit of a departure from the way most people use them in their systems (refugia use for nitrate removal). I was wondering if anyone on this board has/is maintained a seagrass tank and had any good tips to give before I got underway with this project.
Species I'd like to keep are paddlegrass/stargrass, manatee grass and eelgrass. I imagine I'll acquire all of these and see which species do best in the aquarium.
Now to the questions - lighting. I see lots of mentions on this board for using CF screw in type bulbs with daylight temperature (5000-6500K) but does anyone have a decent sense of how much light is needed? If we were using a watts per gallon average, how much would we say? 3 or 4 or 5? More?
Temperature. Some of the seagrasses I'm interested in have temperate zone ranges and have marked growing/dormant seasons. Will seagrass kept in a uniform temperature environment go dormant anyway? Do I need to allow for a cool season during the year?
And most importantly, the topic of the thread really, what sort of substrate would we say is best? Most people seem to keep them in deep sand beds which I will certainly follow - somewhere in the range of 5 or 6". In the wild the seagrasses are found in anoxic soil conditions (which is why they have developed an oxygen pumping system to move O2 down to their roots/rhizomes). Do we have any good guesses as to what sort of soil should be used in the tank?
I'm planning on an aragonite fine/coarse blend for the top layer. Could the bottom layer be mud harvested from a local marine mud flat area? Should I sterilize that mud or use it as a live mud addition to spark the tank to cycle and establish itself with filter feeders, bacteria, algaes, etc?
Any thoughts would be fantastic, I really appreciate the help!
Thanks for reading this long post!
>Sarah
Species I'd like to keep are paddlegrass/stargrass, manatee grass and eelgrass. I imagine I'll acquire all of these and see which species do best in the aquarium.
Now to the questions - lighting. I see lots of mentions on this board for using CF screw in type bulbs with daylight temperature (5000-6500K) but does anyone have a decent sense of how much light is needed? If we were using a watts per gallon average, how much would we say? 3 or 4 or 5? More?
Temperature. Some of the seagrasses I'm interested in have temperate zone ranges and have marked growing/dormant seasons. Will seagrass kept in a uniform temperature environment go dormant anyway? Do I need to allow for a cool season during the year?
And most importantly, the topic of the thread really, what sort of substrate would we say is best? Most people seem to keep them in deep sand beds which I will certainly follow - somewhere in the range of 5 or 6". In the wild the seagrasses are found in anoxic soil conditions (which is why they have developed an oxygen pumping system to move O2 down to their roots/rhizomes). Do we have any good guesses as to what sort of soil should be used in the tank?
I'm planning on an aragonite fine/coarse blend for the top layer. Could the bottom layer be mud harvested from a local marine mud flat area? Should I sterilize that mud or use it as a live mud addition to spark the tank to cycle and establish itself with filter feeders, bacteria, algaes, etc?
Any thoughts would be fantastic, I really appreciate the help!
Thanks for reading this long post!
>Sarah