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Red tide is always an issue when sourcing water. But like Ich, red tide cannot be created by nutrients, it has to be there first to take advantage of them. This site is so stuck on coral tanks. Lagoon grass beds are a whole nother creature. Nutrient levels that grow a lawn would kill a regular tank. Let's see how this plays out.Having lived the red tides created by the release of waters from Lake Okeechobee and farm run off from the cane field to the Everglades, a high nitrogen and phosphate levels in soil “may” create a mini red tide... interested to see.
Just think bay muck from a salt environment may have been better.
Nutrient rich water from Lake O and even run off from yards may have contributed to the growth of Red Tide but it was not created from that. Red Tide starts way out in the Gulf, sometimes 50 miles out and moves to shore via currents. After the mess last year there is a lot of research going on but unfortunately no solutions.Having lived the red tides created by the release of waters from Lake Okeechobee and farm run off from the cane field to the Everglades, a high nitrogen and phosphate levels in soil “may” create a mini red tide... interested to see.
Just think bay muck from a salt environment may have been better.
Nutrient rich water from Lake O and even run off from yards may have contributed to the growth of Red Tide but it was not created from that. Red Tide starts way out in the Gulf, sometimes 50 miles out and moves to shore via currents. After the mess last year there is a lot of research going on but unfortunately no solutions.Having lived the red tides created by the release of waters from Lake Okeechobee and farm run off from the cane field to the Everglades, a high nitrogen and phosphate levels in soil “may” create a mini red tide... interested to see.
Just think bay muck from a salt environment may have been better.
Having lived the red tides created by the release of waters from Lake Okeechobee and farm run off from the cane field to the Everglades, a high nitrogen and phosphate levels in soil “may” create a mini red tide... interested to see.
Just think bay muck from a salt environment may have been better.
Rick, not sure what you are talking about. The "red tide" they are talking about is caused by an algae, Karenia brevis. There may well be blue-green algae blooms (cyanobacteria) due to the COE water releases, but red tides are well documented. Unfortunately, I have to deal with them all the time here in Texas. I work for the agency that regulates the oyster industry and spend a lot of time looking at slides under a microscope. Let's get this back on topic as we are taking the OP down a path that has nothing to do with growing seagrass in a glass tank.What they keep calling a “red tide” isn’t a red tide. It’s a giant cyano bacteria explosion from all the sugar runnoff from the sugar farms. It’s like a massive carbon dosing overdose. All the heterotrophic and cyano bacteria have gone crazy. The sugar industry and the corrupt politicians in Tallahassee keep saying it’s a “red tide” so they can place the blame on a naturally occurring organism and not their pollution. Everyone here in Florida thinks it’s “seasonal” but it’s only seasonal because of the Army corp of engineers releases water after the rainy seasons when the lake is overflowing. They’ve been gaslighting the public for decades calling it a red tide. It’s time people stopped believing it!
Rick, not sure what you are talking about. The "red tide" they are talking about is caused by an algae, Karenia brevis. There may well be blue-green algae blooms (cyanobacteria) due to the COE water releases, but red tides are well documented. Unfortunately, I have to deal with them all the time here in Texas. I work for the agency that regulates the oyster industry and spend a lot of time looking at slides under a microscope. Let's get this back on topic as we are taking the OP down a path that has nothing to do with growing seagrass in a glass tank.
:eek::eek::eek::confused::confused::confused:Time to add the acros!
I would use it as it is with no baking. I used to put garden soil in my tank all the time and I didn't invent that (but I wish I did) It was Robert Straughn "The Father of Salt Water Fish Keeping"
"The Salt Water Aquarium in the Home".
Be a Man, throw that dirt in there and while you are at it, eat some of it. :D
(or a Woman, I am not sure what sex Purple is :cool:)