Hey all, been following the boards for a while, and I've been in the hobby for about 3 years, but this is my first attempt to maintain a dedicated SPS system.
The system is about a year old, however, due to an ich outbreak in my first fish I put it, I ran the system fishless for a while, so the tank didn't really get populated until about February, so I generally consider that to be the beginning of the tank.
So, a little background on the tank: It's a 58g with a 20 long sump, I calculated it all out one day, and it comes to about 50g total water volume. I'm a college student with not as much time to devote to the tank, so I designed the system to be as maintenance free as possible. So, it's barebottom, with a MP40WEs on full blast NTM with 2x Koralia Evo 750s on the opposing wall hooked up the wavemaker function on my RKL, all in effort for lots of flow that will keep my display clean, and it does a really good job of it, I hardly ever have to siphon anything.
I also keep up on daily 1g water changes. So much easier to do than even a 5g weekly change.
I've also placed a K3 in my overflow and a Koralia Nano in my sump, just to keep things suspended everywhere.
As far as other equipment, here's the breakdown:
1x 250w Radium about 15" above the water surface.
RKL controlling fans and heaters and my 2 part dosing, so my temp is consistently 76-77.5. My Alk is about 9-10.
So, my problem is the usual one, color. After I stocked it with a few test frags, I overfed a bit and my N03 went up to 20-25ppm and my P04 went to .15 ppm. So I quickly threw some GFO in there for the P04, about half the recommended BRS dosage because I've seen GFO pale out corals when used too aggressively before. This quickly brought my P04 to 0 ppm on my Hanna checker, but my N03 refused to fall. So I turned to MB7 and Biofuel, starting with 1/4 dosage of the label with the Biofuel. Unfortunately, I didn't remove my GFO, and I think the combination turned my tank water sterile basically. All my frags lost a lot of their color during this period. This coincided with a huge explosion of what looked like thick brown hair algae, followed by a GHA explosion. Both were eradicated fully with 6 turbo snails and 10 more ceriths. After realizing what had happened, I removed the GFO and stopped Mb7 and Biofuel. This corresponded with somewhat of a return in color the color and after taking a more moderate approach to feeding (2x a day with spectra pellets half the week, and a cube of hikari mysis over 2 feedings the other half, also 2 scoops of Reef Chilli 3x a week per instructions on the label) my P04 seems to remain undetectable on my Hanna meter without the use of GFO, but my NO3 hangs out around 20ppm still.
Normally I wouldn't care about the number, the the progress of my coral also seems to have plateaued. There is growth, but progress in the color department has halted to my eyes. Even new frags who haven't endured the stress of the ones that have been there eventually lose their color until they equal out at about the same color saturation as the rest.
I've thoroughly inspected for pests. I am a poor, broke *** college student who's tank already takes up much of my living room in my little apartment, I doubt that my roommate would stand for my installation of another tank to run a proper quarantine haha, and I don't have the money or time to run one anyways. So I do what I can to keep my coral safe, because my previous attempt to keep SPS in my mixed tank ended in a pest filled disaster. I drained the tank for several weeks before rebooting it with all dry BRS rock. No coral and no acros touched the water of the tank for months. I buy from 2 sources, a local vendor who I trust, yet still dip absolutely everything I get from them in a quadruple strength 15 minute Revive dip before it hits the tank. The other is LiveAquaria, who I trust pretty well, yet still inspect everything with a magnifying glass under the lights. The point is, trust me, I've inspected to death and I definitely know what the symptoms of pests and what the pests themselves look like, so I will say with 100% confidence that there are no SPS pests in this tank haha.
Also, one more weird quirk. According to 3 different test kits (2 salifert, 1 elos) my MG sits at around 1700 ppm for no discernible reason whatsoever. I've used Seachem Reef salt, so I don't think it should be that high. And I use BRS 2 part, which is pretty straight in its ingredients, so it shouldn't be elevating it. But it's been like that since the tank's inception. I don't dose any Mg at all, so this one's got me stumped. My alk and Ca stay stable though, so I don't pay it too much mind.
Now, I've seen what colorless coral look like due to lack of nutrients and feeding. And I've seen em when they're in too dirty of water. But for the life of me, I can't tell what my coral need right now. So far, I've tentatively embarked on a strategy of daily MB7 and 1 full dose 1 day a week of BF wit no GFO in an attempt to bring my N03 down. But I'm not seeing a whole lot of change and I don't think my N03 has come down a whole lot (elos kit). So I'm not sure what exactly to do. Should I increase the frequency of BF and attempt to feed more to compensate for the wholesale nutrient-stripping that BF does to my water? Because I'm also concerned that my P04 is undetectable on my checker, all of my experience (and I have some working in all aquacultured coral shop here in Berkeley and was actually successful at helping to revive many of the distressed acros there) says that I should have at least a tiny amount, less the .04 ppm, to really get the coral color and growth that I want. I would greatly appreciate some experienced opinions about what you guys would do with this tank to really get it to shine. I'm missing like one little piece of the recipe that'll make this tank great, I can feel it, I just don't know what it is and am afraid that the wrong change will only send it further backwards as has often happened.
So, sorry for the information overload, I feel like I wrote a little novel here haha, but I just want to make sure you guys are 100% informed on the specifics of this tank because I know how different everybody's is.
So, in a further effort to distill the parameters and set up of the tank for quick reference, here's some stats:
H20 Parameters
SG: 1.026
Temp: 76-77.5 F
dKH: 9-10.6
Ca: 440-460 ppm
N03: 20 ppm
P04: 0 ppm (per Hanna Checker)
MG: 1700 ppm
Equipment
Lighting: 1 x250w Radium run on a Galaxy select-a-watt, 15" above water,
bulb is 4 months old
Flow: 1x MP40wES on 100% nutrient transport mode, 2x Koralio Evos on
opposite tank wall, connected to randomizing wavemaker
Sump: 20g long
Skimmer: Reef Octopus Extreme 160, stock
Salinity controlled by ATO
All water is RO/DI measureing 0 TDS in and out. Berkeley tap water is pretty clean, my RO/DI barely has to work.
Feeding and Dosing
(I'll just put the frequency of each, just know that they do overlap, and that I space them so that I think the tank is getting a roughly even amount of food input)
Spectrum Pellets Thera-A Regular Formula 1mm: 5 days a week, 2x a day, 2 pinches per feeding, enough to form a single layer of pellets pinched between two fingers
Hikari Mysis: 3 days a week, 2x feedings per day, 1/2 cube per feeding, so one total cube of mysis on the days I feed it to the tank.
Reef Chilli: 3 days a week, 1x feeding per day, 2 scoops per feeding
MB7: 10ml daily
BF: 5ml 1x weekly
BRS 2 part: dosed for 18 sec every hour by dosing pumps and my RKL, haven't calculated that daily dosage, but it stays stable, minus one or two second adjustments every now and then
Miscellaneous Tank Info
Dimensions (the height is of the actual water column, because my tank is a modified rimless the water doesn't reach all the way to the rim): 36 x 18 x 18.
Fish stock: 1x Royal Gramma Basslet, 1x McCosker's Flasher Wrasse, 2x Black Ocellaris, 2x Black Fang Blenny, 3x Blue/Green Chromis. All are pretty much full grown, minus an inch or two spread out amongst all of them.
CUC: 15 cerith snails (at least I think it's still 15 haha), 5 Astraea snails a little bigger than a quarter each, 6 golf ball sized turbos (I only ordered 5, but I guess I got the extra one for funsies? Haha, I was shocked at the size of these things, but they have since become some my favorite things in the tank, and they keep it PRISTINE)
And some pics. My friend came over with her brand new $5k camera set up, so I had her snap some pics. No tripod, so the focus and sharpness isn't the best on some shots, but the colors are very very accurate to what you see in person. If anything, these shots actually overrepresent the vibrancy and saturation of the true colors by just a tiny bit.
As you can see, I have at least one or two frags doing okay, namely my Green Slimer which just consistently glows green and to a lesser extent my ORA Sunset Peach Digi, the main body has more tan in it than the pics show, but it's grown a bit and it's growth tips have a nice orange/pink kind of twinkle to em.
For the purposes of my problem, ignore the extremely pale tannish smooth skinned acro, I didn't recognize it as a species being adverse to dips, so my dipping proved to be too aggressive for it and instantly stripped it of color, so it's color issues are independent of everything else's.
So, take a look at the pics and let me have it, tell me what I'm doing wrong, doing right, what you guys would do to really make this something to look at down the road. I'd really appreciate it!
The system is about a year old, however, due to an ich outbreak in my first fish I put it, I ran the system fishless for a while, so the tank didn't really get populated until about February, so I generally consider that to be the beginning of the tank.
So, a little background on the tank: It's a 58g with a 20 long sump, I calculated it all out one day, and it comes to about 50g total water volume. I'm a college student with not as much time to devote to the tank, so I designed the system to be as maintenance free as possible. So, it's barebottom, with a MP40WEs on full blast NTM with 2x Koralia Evo 750s on the opposing wall hooked up the wavemaker function on my RKL, all in effort for lots of flow that will keep my display clean, and it does a really good job of it, I hardly ever have to siphon anything.
I also keep up on daily 1g water changes. So much easier to do than even a 5g weekly change.
I've also placed a K3 in my overflow and a Koralia Nano in my sump, just to keep things suspended everywhere.
As far as other equipment, here's the breakdown:
1x 250w Radium about 15" above the water surface.
RKL controlling fans and heaters and my 2 part dosing, so my temp is consistently 76-77.5. My Alk is about 9-10.
So, my problem is the usual one, color. After I stocked it with a few test frags, I overfed a bit and my N03 went up to 20-25ppm and my P04 went to .15 ppm. So I quickly threw some GFO in there for the P04, about half the recommended BRS dosage because I've seen GFO pale out corals when used too aggressively before. This quickly brought my P04 to 0 ppm on my Hanna checker, but my N03 refused to fall. So I turned to MB7 and Biofuel, starting with 1/4 dosage of the label with the Biofuel. Unfortunately, I didn't remove my GFO, and I think the combination turned my tank water sterile basically. All my frags lost a lot of their color during this period. This coincided with a huge explosion of what looked like thick brown hair algae, followed by a GHA explosion. Both were eradicated fully with 6 turbo snails and 10 more ceriths. After realizing what had happened, I removed the GFO and stopped Mb7 and Biofuel. This corresponded with somewhat of a return in color the color and after taking a more moderate approach to feeding (2x a day with spectra pellets half the week, and a cube of hikari mysis over 2 feedings the other half, also 2 scoops of Reef Chilli 3x a week per instructions on the label) my P04 seems to remain undetectable on my Hanna meter without the use of GFO, but my NO3 hangs out around 20ppm still.
Normally I wouldn't care about the number, the the progress of my coral also seems to have plateaued. There is growth, but progress in the color department has halted to my eyes. Even new frags who haven't endured the stress of the ones that have been there eventually lose their color until they equal out at about the same color saturation as the rest.
I've thoroughly inspected for pests. I am a poor, broke *** college student who's tank already takes up much of my living room in my little apartment, I doubt that my roommate would stand for my installation of another tank to run a proper quarantine haha, and I don't have the money or time to run one anyways. So I do what I can to keep my coral safe, because my previous attempt to keep SPS in my mixed tank ended in a pest filled disaster. I drained the tank for several weeks before rebooting it with all dry BRS rock. No coral and no acros touched the water of the tank for months. I buy from 2 sources, a local vendor who I trust, yet still dip absolutely everything I get from them in a quadruple strength 15 minute Revive dip before it hits the tank. The other is LiveAquaria, who I trust pretty well, yet still inspect everything with a magnifying glass under the lights. The point is, trust me, I've inspected to death and I definitely know what the symptoms of pests and what the pests themselves look like, so I will say with 100% confidence that there are no SPS pests in this tank haha.
Also, one more weird quirk. According to 3 different test kits (2 salifert, 1 elos) my MG sits at around 1700 ppm for no discernible reason whatsoever. I've used Seachem Reef salt, so I don't think it should be that high. And I use BRS 2 part, which is pretty straight in its ingredients, so it shouldn't be elevating it. But it's been like that since the tank's inception. I don't dose any Mg at all, so this one's got me stumped. My alk and Ca stay stable though, so I don't pay it too much mind.
Now, I've seen what colorless coral look like due to lack of nutrients and feeding. And I've seen em when they're in too dirty of water. But for the life of me, I can't tell what my coral need right now. So far, I've tentatively embarked on a strategy of daily MB7 and 1 full dose 1 day a week of BF wit no GFO in an attempt to bring my N03 down. But I'm not seeing a whole lot of change and I don't think my N03 has come down a whole lot (elos kit). So I'm not sure what exactly to do. Should I increase the frequency of BF and attempt to feed more to compensate for the wholesale nutrient-stripping that BF does to my water? Because I'm also concerned that my P04 is undetectable on my checker, all of my experience (and I have some working in all aquacultured coral shop here in Berkeley and was actually successful at helping to revive many of the distressed acros there) says that I should have at least a tiny amount, less the .04 ppm, to really get the coral color and growth that I want. I would greatly appreciate some experienced opinions about what you guys would do with this tank to really get it to shine. I'm missing like one little piece of the recipe that'll make this tank great, I can feel it, I just don't know what it is and am afraid that the wrong change will only send it further backwards as has often happened.
So, sorry for the information overload, I feel like I wrote a little novel here haha, but I just want to make sure you guys are 100% informed on the specifics of this tank because I know how different everybody's is.
So, in a further effort to distill the parameters and set up of the tank for quick reference, here's some stats:
H20 Parameters
SG: 1.026
Temp: 76-77.5 F
dKH: 9-10.6
Ca: 440-460 ppm
N03: 20 ppm
P04: 0 ppm (per Hanna Checker)
MG: 1700 ppm
Equipment
Lighting: 1 x250w Radium run on a Galaxy select-a-watt, 15" above water,
bulb is 4 months old
Flow: 1x MP40wES on 100% nutrient transport mode, 2x Koralio Evos on
opposite tank wall, connected to randomizing wavemaker
Sump: 20g long
Skimmer: Reef Octopus Extreme 160, stock
Salinity controlled by ATO
All water is RO/DI measureing 0 TDS in and out. Berkeley tap water is pretty clean, my RO/DI barely has to work.
Feeding and Dosing
(I'll just put the frequency of each, just know that they do overlap, and that I space them so that I think the tank is getting a roughly even amount of food input)
Spectrum Pellets Thera-A Regular Formula 1mm: 5 days a week, 2x a day, 2 pinches per feeding, enough to form a single layer of pellets pinched between two fingers
Hikari Mysis: 3 days a week, 2x feedings per day, 1/2 cube per feeding, so one total cube of mysis on the days I feed it to the tank.
Reef Chilli: 3 days a week, 1x feeding per day, 2 scoops per feeding
MB7: 10ml daily
BF: 5ml 1x weekly
BRS 2 part: dosed for 18 sec every hour by dosing pumps and my RKL, haven't calculated that daily dosage, but it stays stable, minus one or two second adjustments every now and then
Miscellaneous Tank Info
Dimensions (the height is of the actual water column, because my tank is a modified rimless the water doesn't reach all the way to the rim): 36 x 18 x 18.
Fish stock: 1x Royal Gramma Basslet, 1x McCosker's Flasher Wrasse, 2x Black Ocellaris, 2x Black Fang Blenny, 3x Blue/Green Chromis. All are pretty much full grown, minus an inch or two spread out amongst all of them.
CUC: 15 cerith snails (at least I think it's still 15 haha), 5 Astraea snails a little bigger than a quarter each, 6 golf ball sized turbos (I only ordered 5, but I guess I got the extra one for funsies? Haha, I was shocked at the size of these things, but they have since become some my favorite things in the tank, and they keep it PRISTINE)
And some pics. My friend came over with her brand new $5k camera set up, so I had her snap some pics. No tripod, so the focus and sharpness isn't the best on some shots, but the colors are very very accurate to what you see in person. If anything, these shots actually overrepresent the vibrancy and saturation of the true colors by just a tiny bit.
As you can see, I have at least one or two frags doing okay, namely my Green Slimer which just consistently glows green and to a lesser extent my ORA Sunset Peach Digi, the main body has more tan in it than the pics show, but it's grown a bit and it's growth tips have a nice orange/pink kind of twinkle to em.
For the purposes of my problem, ignore the extremely pale tannish smooth skinned acro, I didn't recognize it as a species being adverse to dips, so my dipping proved to be too aggressive for it and instantly stripped it of color, so it's color issues are independent of everything else's.
So, take a look at the pics and let me have it, tell me what I'm doing wrong, doing right, what you guys would do to really make this something to look at down the road. I'd really appreciate it!




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