And you can find many very strong setups running having never disturbed the sand.
what we do here is a control method opposite of the current advice of the hobby majority but we get to track livetime work threads, false claims will be highlighted by bad outcomes, bad updates in two months.
this thread here will be important for tracking the need of sandbed bacteria. Some aspect of negativity will manifest, if missing them is bad
as in health of the system, no invasion etc
earlier he had some sandbed diversity but didn’t like the tanks look, the diversity included an invasion fairly persistent
now it’s just gone, but he gets to keep all the coral mass + have rocks with no algae, it would have taken to summertime and beyond with other methods.
***tradeoff invasions are 100% factored here. We could have killed the rock algae with fluconazole powder
but that would now add dead algae, fluconazole side targets, current sandbed invader, plus detritus
all we did essentially was turn his system into a bare bottom setup, but with sand. going bare bottom isn’t really hurting reef tanks, and installing neutralized sand also doesn’t hurt, per pics.
u buyin any of that
b
side benefit of a rip clean, uncommon standout:
his tank (or true bare bottom tanks) can beat comparative tanks in longevity with sandbeds during a power outage or stilled event, due to lower systemic biological oxygen demand. a rip cleaned system (or bare bottom system) runs the most efficient oxygen/co2 potentials due to not housing sludge bacteria. They compete for nitrifier resources, namely oxygen, and sap it from resident fish during extended power outages. <—— heavy sandbed accumulations use more oxygen than all your fish do.
Traditional sandbeds have *far* more competing bacteria *against* nitrifiers than they have actual nitrifying bacteria. What we do is called backflushing, it’s what zoos and large aquariums do to maintain large filter systems for sharks / whales etc, but we are doing it inside the reef tank...to the working substrates. his reef looks like a huge diamond ring of sparkly clean laser now.
rip clean benefit #3
poll around in the fish disease forum: do massive stores of organics in sandbeds house fish pathogens and extend disease cycles by providing direct refuge...diversity = two sided coin, sometimes aligning the tank to take on safe coral mass won’t include doing it over a classic sandbed. If a microbiologist were to take a sample of tapwater rip cleaned tank sand, and place it on agar that selects for marine bacteria, complete inoculation will result. Rinsing in tap water will not sterilize sand, it can still oxidize waste.
what we do here is a control method opposite of the current advice of the hobby majority but we get to track livetime work threads, false claims will be highlighted by bad outcomes, bad updates in two months.
this thread here will be important for tracking the need of sandbed bacteria. Some aspect of negativity will manifest, if missing them is bad
as in health of the system, no invasion etc
earlier he had some sandbed diversity but didn’t like the tanks look, the diversity included an invasion fairly persistent
now it’s just gone, but he gets to keep all the coral mass + have rocks with no algae, it would have taken to summertime and beyond with other methods.
***tradeoff invasions are 100% factored here. We could have killed the rock algae with fluconazole powder
but that would now add dead algae, fluconazole side targets, current sandbed invader, plus detritus
all we did essentially was turn his system into a bare bottom setup, but with sand. going bare bottom isn’t really hurting reef tanks, and installing neutralized sand also doesn’t hurt, per pics.
u buyin any of that
b
side benefit of a rip clean, uncommon standout:
his tank (or true bare bottom tanks) can beat comparative tanks in longevity with sandbeds during a power outage or stilled event, due to lower systemic biological oxygen demand. a rip cleaned system (or bare bottom system) runs the most efficient oxygen/co2 potentials due to not housing sludge bacteria. They compete for nitrifier resources, namely oxygen, and sap it from resident fish during extended power outages. <—— heavy sandbed accumulations use more oxygen than all your fish do.
Traditional sandbeds have *far* more competing bacteria *against* nitrifiers than they have actual nitrifying bacteria. What we do is called backflushing, it’s what zoos and large aquariums do to maintain large filter systems for sharks / whales etc, but we are doing it inside the reef tank...to the working substrates. his reef looks like a huge diamond ring of sparkly clean laser now.
rip clean benefit #3
poll around in the fish disease forum: do massive stores of organics in sandbeds house fish pathogens and extend disease cycles by providing direct refuge...diversity = two sided coin, sometimes aligning the tank to take on safe coral mass won’t include doing it over a classic sandbed. If a microbiologist were to take a sample of tapwater rip cleaned tank sand, and place it on agar that selects for marine bacteria, complete inoculation will result. Rinsing in tap water will not sterilize sand, it can still oxidize waste.
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