How Do You Maintain Nitrates Without Triggering Algae Growth?

PharmrJohn

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There are a few things that can be done. What I'm gonna try are a good CUC, utilitarian fish, PO4 in the 0.04 to 0.1 range, NO3 from 10 to 20, a more limited time with lights on, good husbandry and praying to any reef god that'll listen. And of course, any other ideas I can pick up along the way.
 

Subsea

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I’ve seen that paper before and reread it just now. It does not suggest that doc encourages algae growth ( nor does it).

What it does claim is summarized best by this section from it:

High values of DOC cause them to become outcompeted by harmful bacteria, which then causes coral to die from disease. As more corals die, there’s more room for algae to colonize, reinforcing the cycle.

while I do not agree with all of the assertions in the paper, even if one does, there is no place where it suggests that doc directly boosts algae growth. It merely says doc is bad for corals and causes disease that kill them, with algae taking over.

In a reef tank with algae issues, it’s almost never because corals have died and algae took its place. The algae is growing all over, on rock, glass, plastic, and even sand. It’s not that a coral used to be there that died of a bacterial pathogen. There was never anything else there and algae took the location and thrived.
Interesting that we both reread the article and focused on differrent areas. I gathered that cryptic sponges were a solution to a complex problem: DOC.
 

Doctorgori

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High nitrates, High phosphates, red light, white light …
NONE of that causes algae anymore than fertilizer and sunlight causes weeds….(they all contribute but that misses the point)

I have three tanks all with phosphates over .1and Nitrates well over 25ppm
Ive also (in the past) have lit my tanks as white as I want ..

Besides CUC, IME the best “prevention” for algae growing on something is for something else to be there first: corals, coraline, sponges, et et
 

ChrisRD

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Don't over complicate it. As others have said, you need nutrients to grow coral. Once you have stable input / export just add cleanup critters until they can keep pace with the algae growth.
 

Randy Holmes-Farley

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Interesting that we both reread the article and focused on differrent areas. I gathered that cryptic sponges were a solution to a complex problem: DOC.

That is also a good conclusion, if there are enough. I just don’t agree that such removal to any extent will have any impact on algae.
 

VintageReefer

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I feel nitrates and phosphates are only a slice of the pie, and get too much focus.

I have zero herbivorous fish. I have a small cleanup crew for a 75g tank. And I don’t believe they contribute much at all.

My display has no algae issues. But I do have one rock in a rear corner that has hair algae. It never gets better or worse. Just seems to want to grow a certain amount then stops. I’ve plucked and it grows back. I’ve plucked and put snails and hermits directly on the rock. They just leave. It comes back. Then it stays a certain way.

I’ve run my tank at .04 phosphates and 5 nitrates for 1.5 years. I hit .98 phosphate in a spike for a few days. I currently run the tank at .4 phosphate and 10-20 nitrates. Regardless of any of these numbers the outcome is the same. Zero display algae except for the one rock

do you see tons of critters cleaning my sand and glass? I have 10-15 snails tops, probably 5 hermits. In a 75 gallon tank

Not saying that they don’t work for most people, but there is more at play here because I run higher nutrients, have a tiny clean up crew, and my tank does very well. Film algae on glass is all I regularly get

If it matters, I do have a large yellow sponge colony in the display (pic 3) and I do have a cryptic zone in my sump with a few species of sponge as well
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Subsea

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I feel nitrates and phosphates are only a slice of the pie, and get too much focus.

I have zero herbivorous fish. I have a small cleanup crew for a 75g tank. And I don’t believe they contribute much at all.

My display has no algae issues. But I do have one rock in a rear corner that has hair algae. It never gets better or worse. Just seems to want to grow a certain amount then stops. I’ve plucked and it grows back. I’ve plucked and put snails and hermits directly on the rock. They just leave. It comes back. Then it stays a certain way.

I’ve run my tank at .04 phosphates and 5 nitrates for 1.5 years. I hit .98 phosphate in a spike for a few days. I currently run the tank at .4 phosphate and 10-20 nitrates. Regardless of any of these numbers the outcome is the same. Zero display algae except for the one rock

do you see tons of critters cleaning my sand and glass? I have 10-15 snails tops, probably 5 hermits. In a 75 gallon tank

Not saying that they don’t work for most people, but there is more at play here because I run higher nutrients, have a tiny clean up crew, and my tank does very well. Film algae on glass is all I regularly get

If it matters, I do have a large yellow sponge colony in the display (pic 3) and I do have a cryptic zone in my sump with a few species of sponge as well
CE9A4DCB-8930-47A9-9391-2A4CF4E4951B.jpeg
1CA419E1-D770-45E9-9E6D-5B6F26A0404B.jpeg
D7C99B4D-0F2E-41E7-B481-36B539202A74.jpeg
FF1AE9FB-33C7-4ED8-BD1C-9DE6D29291AD.jpeg
53525CB7-B059-420F-A3D2-D67E521781D5.jpeg
AF7B7BF8-5F0B-46EA-857E-2EFAF7A47E3B.jpeg
3D233450-F6B0-4442-9F1E-512EBCFA2739.jpeg
Between you & Richard Ross, you two have defied the popular topic that high inorganic N & P are bad in a reef tank.
 

CHSUB

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Between you & Richard Ross, you two have defied the popular topic that high inorganic N & P are bad in a reef tank.
No, it’s old new! “..elevated nitrate levels as high as 10 ppm nitrate-nitrogen (approximately = 40 ppm nitrate ion) may encourage more rapid growth of both soft and stony corals (D. Stuber, pers. comm.). From The Reef Aquarium, Sprung 1994. Not much has changed since the mid 1990s most is regurgitated and repackaged.
 

VintageReefer

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No, it’s old new! “..elevated nitrate levels as high as 10 ppm nitrate-nitrogen (approximately = 40 ppm nitrate ion) may encourage more rapid growth of both soft and stony corals (D. Stuber, pers. comm.). From The Reef Aquarium, Sprung 1994. Not much has changed since the mid 1990s most is regurgitated and repackaged.
I was actually reading old posts from 10 years ago on a scrubber forum about how scrubbers work, and theories on algae growth and a lot of the same stuff from today, a lot of interesting and technical theories, and in the end, no real conclusion lol.

We know how to grow it, but how to stop growing it, without killing coral..and how growing in one place affects another…both things are possible but lack a clear universal explanation. There’s so many variables at play
 

Subsea

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No, it’s old new! “..elevated nitrate levels as high as 10 ppm nitrate-nitrogen (approximately = 40 ppm nitrate ion) may encourage more rapid growth of both soft and stony corals (D. Stuber, pers. comm.). From The Reef Aquarium, Sprung 1994. Not much has changed since the mid 1990s most is regurgitated and repackaged.
Physics, biology, chemistry & biochemistry are Laws of Nature and they do not change. However, our understanding of processes have progressed. I have said it before, “the more I learn, the more I realize how little I know”.

I don’t recall any conversations about the
Coral Holibiont or Intelligent Design in the 1990’s.

PS: Bacteria in biofilm of coral that crosstalk with other bacteria then using gene expression to modify chemical parameters is a novel idea to me.
 
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Randy Holmes-Farley

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Nitrate is particularly uncertain in its effects since it is never known how much N, if any, corals or algae are getting from nitrate in a given tank, regardless of level.
 

Subsea

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Nitrate is particularly uncertain in its effects since it is never known how much N, if any, corals or algae are getting from nitrate in a given tank, regardless of level.
Would you go into more detail with your reasons?

I have read peer reviewed papers that indicate that certain Cynobacteria in coral biomass perform nitrogen fixation to supply coral with nitrogen when bulk water is nitrogen limited. Does that agree with what you just said.
 

Randy Holmes-Farley

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Would you go into more detail with your reasons?

I have read peer reviewed papers that indicate that certain Cynobacteria in coral biomass perform nitrogen fixation to supply coral with nitrogen when bulk water is nitrogen limited. Does that agree with what you just said.

In no aquarium can we know how much N any organism is getting from nitrate vs things we do not measure such as ammonia or urea, or organics in the case of corals . Since many organisms prefer ammonia to nitrate (due to it being usable with less energy expenditure), they will often take what they can get from ammonia, and maybe only use nitrate if they need even more.
 

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