Gary Majchrzak
Team RC
I hadn't thought of that. Thanks for pointing it out!Hopefully by running my skimmer more wet these days, collapsed skimmate wont be as much of a factor. Perhaps you discovered another benefit of running it wet
I hadn't thought of that. Thanks for pointing it out!Hopefully by running my skimmer more wet these days, collapsed skimmate wont be as much of a factor. Perhaps you discovered another benefit of running it wet
I agree.Nice ideas.
I think running it at night may be even more important than during the day since many tanks get a bit hypoxic at night due to the end of photosynthesis and respiration of CO2 and the skimmer oxygenates well. ..
skimmers only remove about 25% of stuff.
Properly set up reef aquariums usually don't have a shortage of stuff to pull out (IME) and improperly set up ones often have much more to remove![]()
the answer to your question probably varies from aquarium to aquarium and what the aquarist is trying to acheive but.... I have a feeling you already knew thatSkimmers seem to pull more stuff out at night. I have always attributed that to break down of foods and waste from day feedings and higher planktonic count at night. I have once sampled water and checked under a scope for a different topic research. But at night the water is more rich in plankton. Corals have expelled extras before it got dark, phytoplankton daily bloom reached its max, sand/rock fauna spawning all this together will make a spike in organic matter in water and a good skimmer will pull it out.
The only question, is it a good thing that its pulled out?
Likely, most of it is organic material that is attracted to the air water interface. Specifically, hydrophobic or amphipathic molecules. These are those that are repelled by water or have bi polarity with one end attracted to water (hydrophyllic) and one repelled by it (hydrophobic) causing them to be attracted to water at one end and repelled at the other. Hydrophobic and amphipathic molecules include: ammino acids, vitamins, proteins, fats, carbons biomolecules(bacteria etc).slimes, toxins, etc. They do not include: inorganic material such as NO3 and PO4 since these are polar and are not attracted to the air water .Of course nitrogen and phosphorous bound to organics( molecules which contain carbon and hydrogen) may be skimmed as may metals( trace elements and toxins) that are bound to organics. It is also likely that larvae and other micro organisms get skimmed out to some degree just by getting caught in the foam.Some precipitants may also get caught in the foam such as precipitated PO4.
Maybe less oxygen at night overall cuts down on oxidation and makes material more skimable via less organic breakdown. . I don't know if they skim more at night or not but do know that there is likely more H+ and carbonic acid around then. Just a guess.:fish1:
you can kill fishes. I've done it.It would be interesting to see what would happened in a tank with very low O2 level that also had a fair amount of organics.
that would work but it would be dangerous and not very fun.How would you lower O2 levels in the skimmer tank?
Connect the skimmer venturi to a CO2 tank?
you can kill fishes. I've done it.
that would work but it would be dangerous and not very fun.
I would lower O2 levels in the tank by closing up the house while having my buddies over with some girls for a wet T-shirt contest. Still dangerous but much more fun![]()