You are right, thanks a lot.read some of paul b stuff he always does this to add bacteria to tank
Ok, being that it is not that much I put it in my sump, gave some to my tang and he loves it.....if it grows I'll give it to him to keep control on it.I was temped to do this once but then someone told me that the shore line acts like the skimmer for the ocean. Also with all the junk dumped into our waters I didn't want to risk putting junk into my tank. I heard if you collect stuff a couple miles off shore then you would be safer. I have no first hand experience with this I just didn't want to risk my tank.
Thanks Paul. Was going to boil it first so I get any unwelcome things in my tank.
So in your opinion the stuff we find amoung the shoreline is safe to put in our tanks? What are your thoughts on the junk that washes up among the seaweed and all? Don't take my questions as not believing you or attacking you. I just don't know so I'm trying to learnJust collect it and throw it in your tank. Your tangs will love you for it. That nonsense about collecting water and stuff far offshore is ridiculous.
Nice videoDon't boil anything. Remember, your fish came from the sea, and they probably came from a place where the water was much dirtier than where you collected that seaweed.
I have been collecting things for my reef since it was started many moons ago. No problems yet.
Here is a video of some of the stuff I put in my tank. You need to turn up the sound as it was taken with an underwater camera.
Another video
I was always curious about picking up some inverts and such around the beach, not sure if they would adjust to a hotter reef tank though.
Got it, thanks a lot again Paul.Remember, if you are the type of person that quarantines everything, you can't put stuff from the sea in your tank because your fish don't have much of a functioning immune system. You can't quarantine that stuff. You need to be running a natural tank to add all that stuff. There are different ways to run your tank and you really can't mix the two systems.