sps tanks seem to have less algae,,reasons

Yea man I have a lot of Randy's articles bookmarked. There's a wealth of knowledge from that guy.

Earlier you mentioned you wanted to stay away from macroalgae as a way of exporting nutrients. Why? Macroalgae would be grown and harvested in a separate refugium tank that's plumbed into the display tank. It's not grown in the display, just in case you were thinking that.
 
FYI it isnt necessary to have a carbon dosing system, PO4 reactor, calcium reactor or anyother type of equipment like that besides a good quality skimmer and maintaining ROCK SOLID calcium and alk levels. I suggest either a calcium reactor *(mainly on larger aquariums) and a doser maintaining a 2 part supplement. I use a doser bc it easy and I have a small tank but if I had a tank over 125 g I would invest in the calc. reactor.

There is a sticky up top in the SPS forum for FAQs which has alot of good info regarding husbandry for SPS tanks.
 
Yea man I have a lot of Randy's articles bookmarked. There's a wealth of knowledge from that guy.

Earlier you mentioned you wanted to stay away from macroalgae as a way of exporting nutrients. Why? Macroalgae would be grown and harvested in a separate refugium tank that's plumbed into the display tank. It's not grown in the display, just in case you were thinking that.

Yuper I've done it before and it worked, I just wanted to go a different way this time around. I've seen to many successful reef tanks with out macroalgaes so there has to be another way. Thought about ATS but I'm not to sure that is the answer either.
 
ATS are great. Reefkeeper uses one on his tank and it does an excellent job. Personally, after using a fuge on my 75g sps, I would suggest revisiting this method. When I used the fuge the water quality was perfect. THings in that tank were bullet proof. It gives you that 2nd line of defense which in the hobby is important. If I had the room I would have a fuge setup on mytank in a minute but my tank is smaller and all-inclusive under the 2x2 stand.
 
Aside from what a lot of other have said, I think the magic "switch" involves the amount of money that most SPS keepers invest in their systems in terms of equipment and cost to operate. When you spend a good deal of cash on something, it's more of a catalyst to be a better aquarist in terms of moderate feeding, maintenance, husbandry, cleaning the skimmer collection cup regularly, and keeping things neat and tidy while maintaining stable, acceptable parameters. Many people who say they barely do anything and have these amazing colors and growth have to be taken with a grain of salt (no pun intended). These are captive systems...they need maintenance and a keen, trained eye.

There are countless methods to growing the SPS sticks....refugiums, carbon dosing, zeo, large water changes, Berlin Method, etc. There will be another method next year for sure. One thing sticks out as the underlying theme....stability. There are successful SPS keepers with alkalinity from 6 - 12, calcium from 380 to 500, temperatures from 74 - 84 degrees and magnesium levels all over the board. One thing you find though is that the great ones have numbers that stay rock solid ALL THE TIME. This is the art of the game, and it doesn't seem to change.

I once read that famous reefer David Saxby said we don't keep fish, invertebrates or corals. We keep water...the rest just falls into place. How true that is. It's the Indian...not the arrow. You'll see every popular brand of salt, lighting, filtration method or any other aspect of the game maligned and praised by different people. Find out which one works for you and is more beneficial to your system and stick with it. Or better yet, mimic the traits of the great ones and save yourself the hassle of guessing Every time a zeo tank looks like the greatest colors and polyp extension in the world someone like Mark Polletti comes along with deep, rich colors, lots of well fed fish and nitrates between 5 and 10 to win a very well deserved tank of the month. The truth is...they all work.

None works better than the other because they've all proven successful at growing bright. colorful happy SPS. Some are just better at keeping their water box much more stable and free from sudden changes.
 
Aside from what a lot of other have said, I think the magic "switch" involves the amount of money that most SPS keepers invest in their systems in terms of equipment and cost to operate. When you spend a good deal of cash on something, it's more of a catalyst to be a better aquarist in terms of moderate feeding, maintenance, husbandry, cleaning the skimmer collection cup regularly, and keeping things neat and tidy while maintaining stable, acceptable parameters. Many people who say they barely do anything and have these amazing colors and growth have to be taken with a grain of salt (no pun intended). These are captive systems...they need maintenance and a keen, trained eye.

There are countless methods to growing the SPS sticks....refugiums, carbon dosing, zeo, large water changes, Berlin Method, etc. There will be another method next year for sure. One thing sticks out as the underlying theme....stability. There are successful SPS keepers with alkalinity from 6 - 12, calcium from 380 to 500, temperatures from 74 - 84 degrees and magnesium levels all over the board. One thing you find though is that the great ones have numbers that stay rock solid ALL THE TIME. This is the art of the game, and it doesn't seem to change.

I once read that famous reefer David Saxby said we don't keep fish, invertebrates or corals. We keep water...the rest just falls into place. How true that is. It's the Indian...not the arrow. You'll see every popular brand of salt, lighting, filtration method or any other aspect of the game maligned and praised by different people. Find out which one works for you and is more beneficial to your system and stick with it. Or better yet, mimic the traits of the great ones and save yourself the hassle of guessing Every time a zeo tank looks like the greatest colors and polyp extension in the world someone like Mark Polletti comes along with deep, rich colors, lots of well fed fish and nitrates between 5 and 10 to win a very well deserved tank of the month. The truth is...they all work.

None works better than the other because they've all proven successful at growing bright. colorful happy SPS. Some are just better at keeping their water box much more stable and free from sudden changes.


thats funny, one of my friend checked his water every day and dosed twice daily...really nice looking tank...but in the end it didn't mater his wife left him
 
This thread is interesting, but I must have an odd-ball tank because it is new, set up maybe 3 months and in the past I always went through the different algae stages. I havent with this one, cant hardly get algae to grow except coralline.
My water has 0 nitrates and 0 phosphates. The only thing different I am running is bioplastics.
I added a few sps a few weeks ago (i know not very long) but they are looking great and my birdsnest has grown back quite a few polyps since a coral beauty that I HAD ate them.
Anyway, my point is I know my tank tank is still very early in maturing, but not growing any nusence algae.
 
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