It wouldn’t hurt to dose your mag up to 1350-1400 either! LPs love higher mag for some reason..Flow seems to be good. Nice swaying from them. Other LPS in the tank are doing great.
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It wouldn’t hurt to dose your mag up to 1350-1400 either! LPs love higher mag for some reason..Flow seems to be good. Nice swaying from them. Other LPS in the tank are doing great.
Nah… only use that for cyano as a last resort! You kill more good stuff than bad in your biome.I friend just suggested doing a round of chemiclean to clear up any possible bacterial infections. Thoughts on that?
Yea that's a great plan. Kill off your biome while starving your corals. Good recipe for success.I friend just suggested doing a round of chemiclean to clear up any possible bacterial infections. Thoughts on that?
Flakes do nothing basically for raising nutrients levels. Frozen raises nitrates, pellets raises phosphate.I feed three times a day. Twice a day with flakes, once a day with mysis shrimp.
LED/T5 hybrid. A rinkydink Current USA Marine Orbit fixture, and two T5HO fixtures. Bulbs are 2 Blue, one True Actinic, and one Coral+.
Tank is 6'x18"x22".
1. It wouldn't kill the biomeYea that's a great plan. Kill off your biome while starving your corals. Good recipe for success.
Yes, your corals can get infections when they are under stress such as lack of nutrition and their immune systems get compromised. Dipping will not cure the underlying problem and chemiclean will completely bottom out your nutrient levels and your next thread will be about a big dino outbreak.
How does it know the difference between good and bad bacteria? Sure it will lower the overall biome which is why we see so many people get rid of their cyano only to have major dino issues develop. Harsh chemicals should be the absolute last resort.1. It wouldn't kill the biome
2. Not every illness is based on something that's in every tank. I.e. - there is no knowledge about nutrition
3. Minimize dipping
1. No clue, since there is no definition of good and badHow does it know the difference between good and bad bacteria? Sure it will lower the overall biome which is why we see so many people get rid of their cyano only to have major dino issues develop. Harsh chemicals should be the absolute last resort.
Certainly there are obvious good and bad types of bacteria in reefing. Cyano=bad nitrifying = good as a very basic example. I doubt chemiclean cares at all about good or bad so as it eliminates both good and bad bacteria how can this not effect the overall tank biome? I used chemiclean once early on in my tank and learned from my mistake.1. No clue, since there is no definition of good and bad
2. You are not measuring a decline in a biome, you're kind of have a correlation/causation argument.
3. Said = harsh chemcals should be the last resort.