I have not been a fan of either for a while, but it was more of a hunch than totally science based. I have never had any issues with low, but detectable building blocks. However, after some time, reading and some research, I am now convinced with some science that both are a bad idea.
I just want to type this once and link to it in the future, so this is why I am starting the thread. My apologies to those who do not care.
Nitrate dosing:
Most corals prefer ammonia and ammonium to get their nitrogen. Single cell algae can do this too. Nitrate can be used, but it takes more energy and is not the preferred method. If ammonia is still in good supply, then adding extra nitrate will not do anything from what I can tell since the coral can meet their need with nh3 and nh4.
Phosphate dosing:
Dosing phosphate will mostly just get bound to the aragonite and not really get to the corals. Of course, if you add enough, then there can be some excess in the water. I fear that people will one day have to fight phosphate issues from when their rock was binding up phosphates at an elevated level.
I am not saying that people need to keep both very low. I not saying that people need to chase numbers. I am just saying that dosing is probably not a good way to help your coral if you feel they need elevated levels of building blocks... the age old adage to "just feed more" might be the way to go. Heck, ammonia dosing might be even better than dosing nitrate, but we can table this for another day.
/tldr
I just want to type this once and link to it in the future, so this is why I am starting the thread. My apologies to those who do not care.
Nitrate dosing:
Most corals prefer ammonia and ammonium to get their nitrogen. Single cell algae can do this too. Nitrate can be used, but it takes more energy and is not the preferred method. If ammonia is still in good supply, then adding extra nitrate will not do anything from what I can tell since the coral can meet their need with nh3 and nh4.
Phosphate dosing:
Dosing phosphate will mostly just get bound to the aragonite and not really get to the corals. Of course, if you add enough, then there can be some excess in the water. I fear that people will one day have to fight phosphate issues from when their rock was binding up phosphates at an elevated level.
I am not saying that people need to keep both very low. I not saying that people need to chase numbers. I am just saying that dosing is probably not a good way to help your coral if you feel they need elevated levels of building blocks... the age old adage to "just feed more" might be the way to go. Heck, ammonia dosing might be even better than dosing nitrate, but we can table this for another day.
/tldr
