poormedstudent
Member
Okay - I know that skimmate it dissolved organic proteins extracted from the water. The darker the skimmate the more concentrated and/or the heavier the organics. But what exactly makes the proteins and why are they deemed unneeded?
I've heard the argument that the ocean produces skimmate at the shore. Well, I grew up in south Florida (the only location with live reefs in the continental U.S.) and there was some foam on the shore, but nothing in proportion to the size of the reefs.
If we take out one cup of skimmate a week from a 30-50 gallon reef tank... well, proportionately, the skimmate from the reefs lining the south Florida coast would be a daily foam bath on the beach. I've seen that once or twice, but it is rare. So where does it all go?
Is there another use that the ocean has for it? Are we taking something out of our tanks that may be needed? Just curious.
Also, what can the skimmate be used for? Could it be used as a fertilizer for plants?
I've heard the argument that the ocean produces skimmate at the shore. Well, I grew up in south Florida (the only location with live reefs in the continental U.S.) and there was some foam on the shore, but nothing in proportion to the size of the reefs.
If we take out one cup of skimmate a week from a 30-50 gallon reef tank... well, proportionately, the skimmate from the reefs lining the south Florida coast would be a daily foam bath on the beach. I've seen that once or twice, but it is rare. So where does it all go?
Is there another use that the ocean has for it? Are we taking something out of our tanks that may be needed? Just curious.
Also, what can the skimmate be used for? Could it be used as a fertilizer for plants?