Nitrate and algae question

Cherie cook

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Here’s a question I’ve never gotten a good answer for..I have lots of nuisance algae in my tank, bubble, ulva and hair algae..but my nitrate will still measure on the low side most of the time. Measures anywhere from 0 to 4 via Hanna checker. I sometimes supplement with neonitro because I’m scared to let it drop to 0..but I’m wondering if the presence of all this nuisance algae means there’s enough nitrate in the water column to support my corals despite the low readings? Like is it being taken up by the algae so it’s not measurable?
 

TX_REEF

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Yes, likely being taken up by the algae growth. unsurprisingly, cleaning up algae tends to not just make your tank look nicer, but also enhance coral growth since less nutrients are being taken up by the algae. I see this very directly in my frag system especially.
 

Mr. Mojo Rising

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Algae consumes nitrates so it skews the test results, more so the worse the algae is. And feeding things like neonitro when you have a bad algae problem just feeds the algae. Your corals always focus on consuming ammonia rather than nitrate, they have to expend energy to break down the nitrate into more useable elements.
 
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Cherie cook

Cherie cook

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Algae consumes nitrates so it skews the test results, more so the worse the algae is. And feeding things like neonitro when you have a bad algae problem just feeds the algae. Your corals always focus on consuming ammonia rather than nitrate, they have to expend energy to break down the nitrate into more useable elements.
So feed ammonia rather than nitrate?
 

TX_REEF

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So feed ammonia rather than nitrate?
do you have fish? if so, you are already feeding your corals ammonia and probably don't need to add anything additional other than what you feed the fish. I'd just focus on cleanup of nuissance algae manually and via CuC.
 

EnterName

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Meaning..what?
Global average nitrate levels for coral reefs: 0.25μM +/- 0.28μM (Source)
This is roughly between 0.016ppm and 0.033ppm if my math isn't off.

This means what we consider "low nitrate" in the hobby is still insanely high when compared to actual coral reefs and most tests aren't even capable of detecting those levels.

Whether natural coral reef levels or the currently recommended "elevated" levels are preferable is an ongoing debate I won't comment on 😂 I personally have seen both approaches work.
 

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