Calcium phosphate

Fishy888

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While removing some GHA yesterday I accidentally bumped my green digitata. It was a fairly soft bump but it was still enough to frag the digi.

It got me wondering whether corals that are growing in a high phosphate environment use much ALK. My ALK is fairly steady but I don’t have tons of sticks yet so I can’t tell if ALK is being consumed. As easily as the green digitata broke I have to assume it’s making its skeleton almost entirely out of calcium phosphate.

My green and purple digis are growing nicely. Both of them are small frags. I have two encrusting montis as well. One is a Mardi Gras montipora and the other is a reverse Superman montipora.
 

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High phosphate level is known to inhibit coral skeleton growth by restricting calcium intake.

 

Randy Holmes-Farley

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As easily as the green digitata broke I have to assume it’s making its skeleton almost entirely out of calcium phosphate.

That does not happen. Skeletons may be more brittle, but they are not primarily calcium phosphate.
 
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That does not happen. Skeletons may be more brittle, but they are not primarily calcium phosphate.
I don’t know why I had it in my head that calcium carbonate couldn’t bind to calcium phosphate. Thank you for letting me know that.
 
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Fishy888

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High phosphate level is known to inhibit coral skeleton growth by restricting calcium intake.

I appreciate the articles. I still have lots to learn clearly. Thank you.
 

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