I have gracilaria, caulerpa prolifera and lettuce in there. The latter two I know grow really fast. The former, not sure but it looks cool. I have an 18 watt reef breeders grow light that I bought on sale for like 40something bucks. lol. It's enough for the small shallow compartment. You don't want to put too much algae to start with. It will grow in as the tank supports and in the interim you'll just have to bite the bullet and manually pull it out of the tank. I bought these cool long stailess tweezers and they're alright. A smaller ball of something is going to have a lot more nutrient to draw from than a huge compartment full of it where there might not be enough. It has to form its own equilibrium. But the cool thing is once it does, it will adapt.
I haven't tested for nitrate or phosphate this week. I used to obsess over it, but I see no reason to obsess over it unless I'm seeing problems. So no, I don't even know. And the thing is, it doesnt matter too much right now because I have no corals to worry about and the fish are getting fat and happy and through all of this the tank is aging which is what I want.
I have 9 fish right now, so a nutrient supply is not a problem and I have some macroalgae growing on my rock in my display as well, and it does grow now, so I guess there is enough "fuel". I'm just going to pull it every few days and throw it in the refugium. Eventually, the system is supporting the same amount of algae, but will only support it in the refugium and not as much in the tank once it's able to start bringing nutrients down. And you just cut out and chuck it as needed.If you have too much, the stuff on top blocks out all the light and the stuff beneath dies too.
It's just a game of patience. Right now, I already have lots of pods in there that I didn't stock, a slowly rotating current where I can see little things swimming around and suspended organic matter. It's getting good aerated water and the surface through the whole refugium is skimming itself so there is no gunk up top. I am using miracle mud as a substrate. If that's a factor, I don't know.
I think a lot of times in the past if I got some algae in my tank, I would kind of panic and do 10 things I thought would change it, and screw up everything...not this time. Let it ride brother!!! lol
I haven't tested for nitrate or phosphate this week. I used to obsess over it, but I see no reason to obsess over it unless I'm seeing problems. So no, I don't even know. And the thing is, it doesnt matter too much right now because I have no corals to worry about and the fish are getting fat and happy and through all of this the tank is aging which is what I want.
I have 9 fish right now, so a nutrient supply is not a problem and I have some macroalgae growing on my rock in my display as well, and it does grow now, so I guess there is enough "fuel". I'm just going to pull it every few days and throw it in the refugium. Eventually, the system is supporting the same amount of algae, but will only support it in the refugium and not as much in the tank once it's able to start bringing nutrients down. And you just cut out and chuck it as needed.If you have too much, the stuff on top blocks out all the light and the stuff beneath dies too.
It's just a game of patience. Right now, I already have lots of pods in there that I didn't stock, a slowly rotating current where I can see little things swimming around and suspended organic matter. It's getting good aerated water and the surface through the whole refugium is skimming itself so there is no gunk up top. I am using miracle mud as a substrate. If that's a factor, I don't know.
I think a lot of times in the past if I got some algae in my tank, I would kind of panic and do 10 things I thought would change it, and screw up everything...not this time. Let it ride brother!!! lol
