I can't wait for this reef to mature....

What defines a reef tank as a mature reef?

  • Time set up

    Votes: 125 35.9%
  • Coral Growth

    Votes: 159 45.7%
  • Can house "expert" livestock

    Votes: 69 19.8%
  • Coralline

    Votes: 80 23.0%
  • Other (please explain in the thread)

    Votes: 36 10.3%

  • Total voters
    348

vetteguy53081

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The term " Mature" and " cycled " are often mixed up.
Cycling is a winding road running for many miles until the denitrifying process stabilizes while mature is a point where you meet no challenges and can expect specimens to thrive well without concern of parameters, and very few to no disturbances in the system.
Mature is a confidence that you can add a $200 fish to the tank and have No concern about its' ability to thrive
 
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Saveafish

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I couldn't answer any of the choices because I really don't know. But I would define it as when nothing ever dies except from old age.
I am also hoping for that for myself. :cool:
I too checked other. I'm with @Paul B on this. With the aquarium being a small eco system it's always changing and growing. In a world of change like this. When things just pass from old age it has hit its maturity level.
 

saintsreturn

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I chose other for this reason. Mature to me means stable. One that is free of unnatural swings in perimeters and can sustain itself through various issues (you pick the issue). My tank is mature when the only thing i need to do is scrape the glass, empty the skimmer cup, top off the water and feed. Anything outside of that (besides pruning and tinkering) means we are messing with the stability, usually.

This stability means fish and corals should live long and happy lives.
 

Matt Carden

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On second thought. LOL

Some hard algaes like halimedia will survive in the display. I was using caulerpa and chaeto which were eagerly attacked by the tangs.

Additionally, those hard algaes from what I hear need very similar conditions to hard corals. So they can be an indicator if hard corals would do well except for things like copper which affect the corals but not the macro algaes.

my .02
I had Halimeda on my live rock from gulfliverock.com but I didn't know what it was til now! Thank you. I'll have to check to see if any made it through my ugly phaseseses?
 

Oscaror

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A mature reef is a combination of all of these things. Lots of corals, all grown to the point where you can't see the live rock anymore. Corals are all healthy and colorful, and params are stable.
 

fish farmer

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I believe maturity comes from coral growth, especially if things are taking up lots of real estate and needs constant fragging.

I could somewhat believe in some stability in water quality, but I don't consider keeping temperature/salinity stable a sign of a mature tank. That is a sign of various controllers/safe guards put in place.
 

mitch91175

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Totally depends on your definition of the word "mature". So let's start with the actual definition of the word "mature":

upload_2019-4-28_17-38-20.png


Now that's out of the way, lol. So from that we can agree to say that a tank is "mature" when we consider our tank to be fully grown. But what is a fully grown tank? Is that one where you have absolutely no space available and have no other choice but to trim frequently? I'd say that is a fully "mature" tank.

But you also have to think about at what point in time does each of us consider our tanks "mature". I'd say my tank is "mature" since it has been running for around 5 years. Been through a few iterations of itself, but overall I can add anything to the tank and have a great chance of survival and growth. Everything in the tank isn't grown so much to where I need to trim, but the tank itself is in a mature state; stable parameters and too much Coralline algae. So much that there are layers in places. Also know that it is mature with being the "coral sitter" for someone until his tank is ready.

With that being said I chose when you have Coralline algae, but in a pretty decent amount. By that time you should have a lot of bio-diversity in the tank. If not then something , at least to me, has gone wrong.
 

Form or function: Do you consider your rock work to be art or the platform for your coral?

  • Primarily art focused.

    Votes: 17 8.5%
  • Primarily a platform for coral.

    Votes: 35 17.4%
  • A bit of each - both art and a platform.

    Votes: 133 66.2%
  • Neither.

    Votes: 10 5.0%
  • Other.

    Votes: 6 3.0%
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