HIGH PHOSPHATES
I have had this system up for a few years now and am happy with the overall tank but I definitely have slow growth, and almost non existent Coraline algae spread. What is there is alive, just no spread.
With that said, I have a Red Sea s500 liter tank tied into a 35 gallon frag tank with 150 total gallons of volume. 12 fish in Main Display including a few tangs plus 3 clowns small tang and wrasse in the 35.
Run AI Hydra 26 over both.
I have been slowly working on tank parameters.
Temp 78 and Salinity 1.025
Alk 9.0
Calcium 450
Magnesium 1350
(Dose BRS 2-part for above)
Nitrates 35
Phosphates 1.12
Just started focusing on nitrates and Phosphates.
They WERE 1.62 and in about 3 weeks lowered to 1.12. used a lesser dose of NOPOX.
Both tanks are bare bottom and I do siphon detritus during me weekly(or so) water changes. Have anthias so feed a handful of times a day. But only what they eat. Also run a good side Reef Octopus skimmer, and change my filter socks regularly.
Lost $800 worth of jawbreakers....so looking for advice. Also had some other softies just melt away.
I believe lowering the phosphates should be a goal as it will probably help the overall health of the tank.
Is there an ideal level to reduce it by monthly?
I currently do have cheato added, and BIOBAK bacterial pellets(enough for a 50 gallon system).
Cheato did grow a little and shared some with a local reefer.
From my understanding, all of the phosphate eliminates use bonding to remove the phosphates. With many of these products you can get a very quick drop. Add in the necessary volume of product and use fine mesh filter socks for a.few hour and bamm. Phosphates 1.0 less.
BUT!!!
Before I just in with Phosguard, Phosban, GFO, NoPox, or others...wanted to gain some insight.
Should I continue down this cheato path for a while and see how it pans out, or something else? AND GRADUAL decrease seems like the way to go.
Lastly,
I have all of the above mentioned products and probably a bunch more, so just a matter of going with one.
Main system tank picture attached.
Purchased an ICP test and will probably be doing that right after the new year.
I have had this system up for a few years now and am happy with the overall tank but I definitely have slow growth, and almost non existent Coraline algae spread. What is there is alive, just no spread.
With that said, I have a Red Sea s500 liter tank tied into a 35 gallon frag tank with 150 total gallons of volume. 12 fish in Main Display including a few tangs plus 3 clowns small tang and wrasse in the 35.
Run AI Hydra 26 over both.
I have been slowly working on tank parameters.
Temp 78 and Salinity 1.025
Alk 9.0
Calcium 450
Magnesium 1350
(Dose BRS 2-part for above)
Nitrates 35
Phosphates 1.12
Just started focusing on nitrates and Phosphates.
They WERE 1.62 and in about 3 weeks lowered to 1.12. used a lesser dose of NOPOX.
Both tanks are bare bottom and I do siphon detritus during me weekly(or so) water changes. Have anthias so feed a handful of times a day. But only what they eat. Also run a good side Reef Octopus skimmer, and change my filter socks regularly.
Lost $800 worth of jawbreakers....so looking for advice. Also had some other softies just melt away.
I believe lowering the phosphates should be a goal as it will probably help the overall health of the tank.
Is there an ideal level to reduce it by monthly?
I currently do have cheato added, and BIOBAK bacterial pellets(enough for a 50 gallon system).
Cheato did grow a little and shared some with a local reefer.
From my understanding, all of the phosphate eliminates use bonding to remove the phosphates. With many of these products you can get a very quick drop. Add in the necessary volume of product and use fine mesh filter socks for a.few hour and bamm. Phosphates 1.0 less.
BUT!!!
Before I just in with Phosguard, Phosban, GFO, NoPox, or others...wanted to gain some insight.
Should I continue down this cheato path for a while and see how it pans out, or something else? AND GRADUAL decrease seems like the way to go.
Lastly,
I have all of the above mentioned products and probably a bunch more, so just a matter of going with one.
Main system tank picture attached.
Purchased an ICP test and will probably be doing that right after the new year.