Amazing improvement. Glad you didn’t drop an atom bomb on it and rip everything and wash it with freshwater. It will be fun watching something hunt down all those aiptasia.
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The whole point of rip cleaning is preserving bacteria.Definitely give that sand bed a thorough cleaning before you move more rocks around. I would not rip clean because you have years of other bacteria built up you want to keep. Just take it slow with cleaning. Remember it got that way over years, trying to correct it in a day could actually be what crashes the tank.
Here is a video of where I started:
What scientific source do you have to show that <20% of the overall biome in the tank is in the sand? Would love to read through that.The whole point of rip cleaning is preserving bacteria.
We remove all the detritus, algae, aptaisa, etc from the rocks very carefully making sure to keep the bacteria in the rocks alive. This is where 80%+ of our good bacteria live.
We sacrifice the small amount (<20%) in the sand bed in order to not deal with the detritus there.
Rip Cleaning gives you clean glass, clean sand,clean water, and rocks with much less algae or other baddies.
In my case I never saw ammonia and my Nitrite was never more than 0.1ppm.
I upgraded tanks and for the month after my tank never looked better. Since I've had a few strands of GHA but it is being dealt with by bumping up my CUC (needed after the upgrade anyways)
In summary rip cleaning is getting rid of as much detritus and bad stuff while saving as much bacteria as possible leaving you with a clean but cycled tank.
Params have been stable for a couple days. Getting a bunch of the red slime off the zoas has them opening a bit more today than I’ve seen since I started this project.
Rock flowers don’t seem to care about anything I’m doing. They seem bulletproof.
I added a few snails and two peppermints to see how they do.
Clowns are now super aggressive. They never used to bite me, but now they’re kind of ridiculous.
I rescaped the rock work, but I think I placed it too far back so cleaning will still be tough.
I’ve gotten rid of so many aiptasia, and I bet I still have a worse outbreak than any of you here posting in the aiptasia threads.
So this was neat…saw my rock flower acting weird so I took a picture:
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And then a video of a spawning
I have a leopard wrasse and now a couple peppermint shrimp. I feel berghia would be an expensive snack. Not going to lie though, I have been looking at prices and availability. Really, I just don’t want to add much of anything until I’m certain the tank is healthy. Hopefully that gives the shrimp a chance to do some damageIncredibly cool! I’m fascinated by this thread and cheering you on!
A lot of responses have recommended that you get a berghia. That certainly seems like a terrific idea. Are you considering it?