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I will start by asking are you happy with your tank and is everything thriving or do you have issues with the current setup? If the tank is healthy and you are happy with the setup why make changes? In my new system I will have both bare bottom and a tank with sand. I prefer sand in my reef tanks normally 1-2.5 inches. If there is a good sand clean up crew I never really worried about issues from the sand bed. I can completely understand the bare bottom tanks though where flow is maxed out and sand simply just wont stay in place or causes sand storms. There are also some benefits for detritus removal being easier with bare bottom. I think it comes down to what works best for your setup and desired tank conditions.
Such a great thread!!!! I'm in the decision process for a bare bottom vs sand on my 180 upgrade.
Has anyone used a self-leveling epoxy with reef sand mixed in and applied to the exterior bottom of a tank to get a "sand" look?
Again, another question with conflicting responses, I've heard countless times stirring up sand and/or siphoning can disrupt the bacterial role sand plays and possibly kill the micro fauna in the sand, so many people suggest not touching it at all. This is why I hear a lot of people say sand sifting gobies are bad. Thoughts? I haven't touched my sand for this reason but it sounds like most people in this thread stir it up. I had a diamond watchman goby that I loved but everyone said they're terrible to have because they kill the sand bed over time.
I used to maintenance over 250 systems a month for work on top of my own tank(s) over the years. Several of clients had sand sifting gobys and starfish and snails ect ect and at every monthly cleaning we would vacuum the sand. Not once was it ever "clean". Always had the same grayish brown milky colored crap coming out of it. Move a rock and you have the same thing, clean under the rocks and it was disgusting. Aside from what sand might do at 1", 2", 5", or if sifted, left alone, yata yata it still will have detritus in it and will never be as clean as if you have a hard bottom with flow stirring up food/poop and siphoning it out. Ideally a high flow system with no sand and minimal rock work is best for keeping any detritus from building up but rarely will you have that scenario.
I personally don't think detritus is all that bad, maybe if you let it build up for years and years.
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