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Mine had been steady around 7.5 but the calcium was off the chart high. I allowed the calcium to drop and the alk started rising. Now calcium is around 450 and alkalinity is staying steady at around 8.5. Also coralline has started to explode in the tank, sump, frag tank etc. @Randy Holmes-Farley any thoughts on this?
Coralline, like hard corals, can take off for a lot of reasons, including raising alk and pH.
It might have been that, or perhaps something else changed (lowered phosphate or organics, higher magnesium, more appropriate light intensity, etc. ) :)
I'm a little surprised that people don't shoot for 9-10ish more often.
its because most are running ULNS. if tank is not ULNS and has strong lighting I believe a higher alk gives more growth its important for corals to have enough nutrients so skin can catchup and avoid burnt tips.
Higher ALK + a stable PH in the 8.2+ range has certainly worked for me over the years (when I have been able to manage to keep my PH in that range!). I did however completely murder a tank when bio pellets first came out running my ALK at 12. At the time the unfortunate relationship between high ALK and low nutrients was not very well established so I of course blamed my new LEDs for the disaster. I can understand caution at 11-12 DKH but I was under the impression that 9-10 DKH was just fine. No?its because most are running ULNS. if tank is not ULNS and has strong lighting I believe a higher alk gives more growth its important for corals to have enough nutrients so skin can catchup and avoid burnt tips.
I can understand caution at 11-12 DKH but I was under the impression that 9-10 DKH was just fine. No?