SPS growth and color enhancing additives

DLANDINO

D.L. Heritage Rings
Hi all,

I have been keeping an SPS reef for a little over 2 years now and have recently been turned on to the dosing of Amino acids and potassium for growth and color. I am astounded by the results that I am seeing over the past 2 months. I am seeing growth tips on corals that I never have before, better PE and color. The stuff that I am using seems to be at the bottom of the scale in regard to price (brightwells) and am wondering what every is dosing for their sps tanks and if anyone has upgraded from Brightwells to another brand and have seen better results. Thanks in advance.
 
What brand potassium are you dosing? how much? in what type of tank setup? very interested in what you are doing to get the results you stated I would like to be posting in a few months the same results.
 
I've thought about trying potassium and iodine maybe

he is using brightwells... And probably the suggested dose on the bottle..
 
I use Zeovit's Pohls K Balances Strong at 2x per week at 2ml in my 70 gallon tank. I have BW's that I might swap out every few doses, but like the concentration of zeovits supps, less goes a long way...
 
Be careful with the potassium dosing, i have seen it take a tank down! make sure you check your potassium levels very closley! Hate to see you run into any issues!
 
Zeovits AAcid is the best,Ive used all kinds in the past,second place would be Saliferts AA.Brightwells powdered potassium is as strong as it gets and IMO is there best product next to there Magnesium powder.Pohls Xtra gets extra freaky colors and Ive been out for a month and I can tell the glow is not like it was.
 
I tried a new additive for the first time, it's made by aquavitro, it's called fuel. It's working pretty well, pe is longer and color. Should try it! It's expensive though
 
Guide of SPS coral coloration (make them more vivid, bright)
Posted on September 3rd, 2008 by Ryan Gripp 8 Comments

This guide endeavors to assist you with the ever popular SPS coral. This wasรƒโ€š written by member Shadowramy and it explains specific ideas and strategies in which you can do to affect the color of your corals. This assumes you have a more then basic understanding of water parameters in your tank. Click the read link to start reading about coloring in SPS corals.

In the past I have been asked a lot about coral colorization as well as wanted to satisfy my own curiosity about specific methods to achieving certain colors. Usually I am asked, รƒยขรขโ€šยฌร…โ€œHow do you get good colors?รƒยขรขโ€šยฌ_ Which I then ask, รƒยขรขโ€šยฌร…โ€œWhat specific color are you looking to enhance?รƒยขรขโ€šยฌ_ Over the past several months I have really worked on รƒยขรขโ€šยฌร…โ€œtweakingรƒยขรขโ€šยฌ_ colors and what is needed to get certain colors. I have done my own testing as well as seen a lot of others tanks and what they have done to achieve certain colors. I think I finally have a basic map for those who are interested.
Please note: I am assuming that you meet the minimum suggested standards to keeping SPS; strong lighting, calcium at the appropriate levels, strong skimming and live rock.

Yellows
Highly dependent on Nitrate and PO4 levels. Of course all SPS colors are highly dependent on lack of N and P so I wanted to start with probably the easiest color to get, yellow. Yellows are sort of you baseline; yellows will tell you a lot about what is going on in your tank, what is needed and what is overdosed. Nitrate and/or PO4 reduction is most important, either through technical means such as nitrate/phosphate reducers or biologically through DSB, Carbon dosing and/or water changes and fuges. Basically, if you want to do SPS, I would suggest starting with an acropora that is yellow. If you can get it to say yellow for several months, you should be ready for something else.


Greens
Greens would be the next easiest color to tweak. Most green coloration can be achieved through the addition of an Iron Concentrate (Kents is what I use, however Iron is Iron). You must be very careful with Iron because it is also an Algae accelerator; this is why it is so important for you to get your yellows colors first (your N and P will be lowered).
Additionally, I use my yellows as indicators for my greens and blues. You'll notice a deficiancy if your greens are brown color or they are paling in color. I start off by dosing Iron at about 1 drop per 50 usg twice a week and take note of what happens, color changes, Algae growth, until my yellow acroporas display a green shimmer (it wont be a solid green but a shimmer of a green/yellow).
Please note, a sign of overdosing is a darkening of tissue, when this happens you have added too much iron or too much iron is being added. Another sign of overdosing is Algae growth, stop immediately and possibly do a water change if necessary. Like everything else reef, go slowly.

Blues and some purples
This is mainly for blues but I have found is can also have an effect on purples. The supplement for this is Potassium Iodide Concentrate or Lugolรƒยขรขโ€šยฌรขโ€žยขs solution, ESV Potassium Iodide Concentrate will also work; donรƒยขรขโ€šยฌรขโ€žยขt just get something that says Potassium because that is a little different. Dosing should be done when blue colors become less intense. Again, using yellow corals as indicators, stop dosing when yellow corals display a green shimmer.


Reds/Pinks and some Purples
Primarily for coloring reds and pinks in Montiporas, Pocilloporas, Birdsnest, other Stys and Seriatoporas. The supplement is Potassium (not potassium iodide). If you are using a high potassium salt mix such as Oceanic, Tropical Marine Pro and you are doing regular water changes, you are more than likely not going to need to supplement this much.
For dosing you can use your monitporas, especially caps as indicators. Supplementing is required when Montiporas display slower growth and appear washed out to grey appearance. Indicators on Stys and Pocs are when they look like they have been exposed to air. Polyps are completely withdrawn and colors are light. Other indicators of potassium deficiency is when the pinks turn into a light brown and when acroporas loose their color and get lighter and pale. A major potassium deficiency is seen when tissue is lost, mostly starting from the base opposed to spotting (patchy look). And overdose can lead to tip burning so donรƒยขรขโ€šยฌรขโ€žยขt mistake tip burn for new growth. Tips burns will be white with no polyps.


Purples
Probably one of the hardest coloration of all acroporas from my experience since it is a combination of several variables.
First and foremost is water clarity, which means Carbon and/or filter socks. I have also had good result from biological filters such as using cryptic zones, which produce seasquirts, sponges and other filter feeding animals. Zeo Sponge Power, which can be used in any system, feeds sponges. Sponges are great because they can filter a mass amount of water for better water clarity.
From what I have noted, increased water clarify will first effect SPS tips but not the complete base. I have seen nana and valida with really nice purple tips but brown/tan/white bases. I have seen the same nana and valida in anotherรƒยขรขโ€šยฌรขโ€žยขs tanks, which met all other parameters with a full purple from base to tip.
Second being lighting. From my observations of my own tank and others, purples seem to love 420-440nm range light spectrum, those found in actinics and 20K halides. Some of the best purples I have seen are in tanks that have 440nm blue actinics (ATI Blue+, Giessman Actinic) or 20K Halides (Radium, XM 20K).
Third, supplements such as Iodide and Potassium (see blues and Reds/Pinks). Again, make sure your greens are green and yellows are yellow. Your blue should be bright with depth. Iodide will also help if you have tip burn.
These are just my observations through testing and I am sure in the future other factors will be seen and added. Please feel free to comment with your own observations, data is very important to moving forward.

Any of you real sciency experts out there who can verify all this? I've notice that dosing Iron DOES indeed bring out the deep non-fluorescent greens in SPS.

I thought that dosing potassium chloride brings out light blues in my SPS (like the tenuis that is my current avatar), which is contradictory to what he is saying up there. I'm not 100% sure it was the potassium chloride, but it's my gut feeling. I don't mess with iodine too much in my system, because I've been told it's basically playing with fire.
 
I use to put all this crap in my tanks like a mad scientist and one day said to hell with it and I feel my tanks are in better shape now. At one point I was dosing daily amts of:

Kent tech A/B/M
Coral Accel (AA)
Iodine (had KCl in it)
Strontium/moly blend

along with 2-3x/wk feedings at night of oysterfeast or the like on top of feeding my fish

Now I only do tech A/B/M and feed my fish:beer:
 
I dose Fuel aminos for reefs, 2 part and iodine. I think I am going to stop the aminos cause I only saw a little difference. Iodine is supposed to help with sps color and bleaching. I am going back to the KISS method.
 
Any of you real sciency experts out there who can verify all this? I've notice that dosing Iron DOES indeed bring out the deep non-fluorescent greens in SPS.

I thought that dosing potassium chloride brings out light blues in my SPS (like the tenuis that is my current avatar), which is contradictory to what he is saying up there. I'm not 100% sure it was the potassium chloride, but it's my gut feeling. I don't mess with iodine too much in my system, because I've been told it's basically playing with fire.


IMO Shadowramy's write up is accurate.
 
I tried a new additive for the first time, it's made by aquavitro, it's called fuel. It's working pretty well, pe is longer and color. Should try it! It's expensive though
I use the same stuff. It seemed to work well. I started seeing better color in my sps, some pinks and blues started to come back in some frags I got had lost the color. It is pricey but not as much as some AA additives like ZoeVit and Polyp Lab, those run over $100. I am going to stop AA dosing when I run out here soon. If I see a difference I will start dosing again.
 

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