A 3 DKH tank, hallelujah;
Note the increase in average DKH, pre and post bolus;
Note the increase in average DKH, pre and post bolus;
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- precipitation of organics is noticeably less since stopping Kalkwasser. My filter roll is far less brown. Are the organics just being skimmed now? Either way I like that the sand bed has less brown dust. No noticed change in PO4/NO3.
- slight magical tabletop alkalinity effect. Alk ranges from 9.7 right after dosing to 9.2 right before dosing over 24 hours and I dose 22ml of sodium bicarbonate solution each morning. According to the BRS calculator this should only take 16ml so some of the alk is missing. I use 297g of Baking soda in a 1 gallon milk jug of RODI.
Actual water volume is 17 gallons. 16 gallon tank with a small sump.What size tank are we talking about?
22 mL to boost alk by 0.5 dkH would fit for 31 gallons of actual water volume.
hat might be from the kalk to bicarb switch, unrelated to bolus dosing, or not. :)
Actual water volume is 17 gallons. 16 gallon tank with a small sump.
It was 45 minutes or so. I wanted to make sure it was completely mixed.How long after dosing did you measure? In particular, was it for sure long enough to mix in fully?
If I wasn’t dosing Kalk, what would happen to these organics? They would stay in the water? I precipitation good or bad? I doubt we have the answer to these questions but I am having a hard time thinking the flocculant effect is a bad thing. Seems like some bolus advocates imply it’s good.
Interesting. I cannot imagine how kalkwasser could cause more algae. I believe algae pulls nutrients from the water.Great question. My worry is that many of the organics get precipitated and bound onto aragonite surfaces like live rock and sand and become locally available to algae or cyano through some mechanism. @Randy Holmes-Farley is this a possibility?
Maybe it's just phosphate that this happens to which may spur the growth of algae.
Anecdotally, along with a decrease of growth of an aggressive Valonia species I've noticed less Cyano growth in my sandbed after eliminating Kalkwasser dosing (noticed after about a month of ceasing Kalk).
I've also heard Adam from Frag garage mention a decrease in Algae in the system he has been trying bolus in after stopping Kalkwasser as well as Mike Paletta who reports the same thing.
It is often claimed that limewater (Ca(OH)₂) precipitates phosphate (PO₄). These precipitates could potentially be utilized by algae, as bacteria might be able to dissolve them again. This is presumably due to the creation of a locally acidic microenvironment on the surface of the deposits, allowing algae to access the phosphate once more.Great question. My worry is that many of the organics get precipitated and bound onto aragonite surfaces like live rock and sand and become locally available to algae or cyano through some mechanism. @Randy Holmes-Farley is this a possibility?
It is often claimed that limewater (Ca(OH)₂) precipitates phosphate (PO₄). These precipitates could potentially be utilized by algae, as bacteria might be able to dissolve them again. This is presumably due to the creation of a locally acidic microenvironment on the surface of the deposits, allowing algae to access the phosphate once more.
It would be interesting to know whether there is clear and definitive evidence that this mechanism occurs under certain conditions. However, I assume that there are many aquariums using limewater without experiencing algae problems. This could suggest that either the re-dissolution of phosphate does not happen to a significant extent or that other factors—such as the overall availability of nutrients, the bacterial environment, or competition from corals—play a crucial role.
Did you ever look for a pH effect of the switch before initiating the light ramp?
Having been on the system 8 plus months and despite having ramped lights up by 80% above what was designated as a mixed reef setting, I have no algae to speak of even with PO4 averaging about 1.2. I have had cyano issues but since cutting back on feeding large amounts of frozen foods it is pretty much gone.It is often claimed that limewater (Ca(OH)₂) precipitates phosphate (PO₄). These precipitates could potentially be utilized by algae, as bacteria might be able to dissolve them again. This is presumably due to the creation of a locally acidic microenvironment on the surface of the deposits, allowing algae to access the phosphate once more.
It would be interesting to know whether there is clear and definitive evidence that this mechanism occurs under certain conditions. However, I assume that there are many aquariums using limewater without experiencing algae problems. This could suggest that either the re-dissolution of phosphate does not happen to a significant extent or that other factors—such as the overall availability of nutrients, the bacterial environment, or competition from corals—play a crucial role.
Thank you for your response.I have not seen direct evidence that calcium phosphate precipitates directly, but it might, just like lanthanum phosphate.
But what limewater almost certainly does is accelerate abiotic precipitation of calcium carbonate by boosting pH , and those fresh surfaces will bind phosphate. Maybe it gets buried under more calcium carbonate, or maybe it tends to block further local precipitation. If that effect is significant, then other ways pH is raised, such as a CO2 scrubber) will also do it.
Thank you for your response.
Is it definitively possible that these deposits can be locally dissolved by bacteria and thus become available for algae, for example?
In new tanks with artificial rock or sand, it is often observed that they initially bind a lot of phosphate. In many cases, PO₄ is dosed to prevent limitation—until a certain point when the bound phosphate is suddenly released, causing a sharp increase in PO₄ levels.
Is this the same type of deposition? This would mean that, theoretically, dosing limewater could create a similar effect to that seen in a newly set up tank.
Could this explain why some aquariums experience increased algae growth despite very low measured PO₄ levels, while corals simultaneously show signs of nutrient limitation?
I agree with this to a point. The high phosphate/ high coral load tanks that don’t suffer algae problems likely limit other necessary elements required for rampant algae growth or have other methods of control such as allelopathy.I’m just not convinced that phosphate from rock drives a lot of algae problems since many tanks with elevated phosphate everywhere do not have algae problems.