Looks like you need to clear out some space and start fragging up some acros. I’ll send you my addressI’ve been on the train for 2 months now.. tank is loving it!![]()

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Looks like you need to clear out some space and start fragging up some acros. I’ll send you my addressI’ve been on the train for 2 months now.. tank is loving it!![]()

I do! I have no room for more corals and I already got a 300gal tank lol… I’m trying to find some branching rock to mount the grow out pieces I just gotLooks like you need to clear out some space and start fragging up some acros. I’ll send you my address![]()

Appreciate the attempt.Booo
Sorry Miami, I tried

I’ve got an empty tank to fill so if you do clear out space let me knowI do! I have no room for more corals and I already got a 300gal tank lol… I’m trying to find some branching rock to mount the grow out pieces I just got![]()

Tagging along. Good thread. We used to dose Urea on planted tank as our nitrogen source.
Seems like there has to be a better way to measure the N going into the systems (including waste) to determine if there is enough. It seems like current thinkings is testing Nitrate (end product waste) to ensure its not accumulating. I guess if the nitrates are consistent this would support the current dosage is sufficient?
So would dosing sodium nitrate be just as good as dosing ammonium bicarbonate? I have a really hard time keeping my NO3 above 1ppm with ammonium, but if I dose sodium nitrate, I can easily keep them around 5ppm. So is dosing sodium nitrate a better option for my tank?I think folks who call nitrate an end product waste are showing an unjustified bias against it, but yes, it is a good indicator of sufficiency of available N if there is at least 5+ ppm of nitrate. There may be sufficient other forms of N at lower nitrate levels, but that involves careful monitoring all organisms that use N.
As to the waste comment, urea is obviously a waste product for some organisms (fish and people) and ammonia is an end waste product of other organisms (fish, etc). I just don’t get the dissing of nitrate by calling it an end waste product when it is no more so than other compounds.
I feel like you’re fishing cause I told you I use it..I envisioned many different directions this thread could have gone, but urea dosing was not one of them.
I only added that for a hyperbolic effect. lol

I thought you weren't supposed to show @Miami Reef your secrets.This is how you win grow outs!dose all these 2 gallons daily!
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I’ve told him and everyone else that’s asked or read my build thread what I do.. I think he thinks I’m sabotaging him!I thought you weren't supposed to show @Miami Reef your secrets.

So would dosing sodium nitrate be just as good as dosing ammonium bicarbonate? I have a really hard time keeping my NO3 above 1ppm with ammonium, but if I dose sodium nitrate, I can easily keep them around 5ppm. So is dosing sodium nitrate a better option for my tank?
The problem with this hobby is that everyone speaks with the presumption of knowledge. Even here in Italy... With the game of soccer... They're all coaches. We have 60 million inhabitants... 30 million men, 30 million failed soccer coaches. With results like yours, I would have the humility to take pen and paper and learn, learn, learn, and stop asking... To speak, you must at least have results..Thanks….haha! I’m not that committed, it is still a hobby.
My only argument is that nature reefs, imo, have an over abundant amount of planktonic/particulate foods and most gets swept into the abyss. I think it is possible to provide an optimal amount of particle foods. My proof is success with a sun coral.
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To speak, you must at least have results..
Mine would be 90% beer and bourbon so not sure I could be a candidate for suchI’m just waiting until I read that someone has started “dosing” their tank with pee every morning because it provides all of the nutrients a healthy reef tank needs.
Nitrate (via urea breakdown), ammonium, potassium, sulfate, calcium, magnesium, iodine, iron, manganese, molybdenum, zinc, selenium…
Trace elements. All natural. No additives. Organically filtered. Free. What’s not to like? Just stay away from asparagus.

The medications excreted.What’s not to like?

Nonsense -- someone can be educated and knowledgeable without “results.” The vast majority of successful, let alone elite, soccer coaches (or coaches of any sport) never played the sport they coach, or if they did, they did not do so at an elite or even commendable level. Likewise, some of those "armchair" coaches that only coach their TVs would make tremendous real coaches. Being a only fan does disqualify one's knowledge of the game, winning strategy or prove anything -- other than they did not choose to coach. In the same fashion, most elite players make poor coaches.
Knowing and doing are very different things — neither is a prerequisite for the other. Sometimes they are complementary, but often they are not