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More FAQs about Curing Live Rock 8
Related Articles:
Live Rock, Answering Some LR FAQs by James Fatherree,
Live Rock, Reef
Systems, Refugiums,
Related FAQs: Curing Live Rock 1, Curing
LR 2, Curing LR 3, Curing
LR 4, Curing LR 5, Curing LR 6,
Curing LR 7, Ammonia in/and Marine Systems, Live
Rock in General, LR Life Identification, Live Rock Selection, Shipping/Moving,
Curing Live Rock, Placement,
Lighting, Water
Quality, Live Rock Studies in Fiji
Collaboration & Charts, Sumps,
Refugiums, Faux
Rock,
Best to have no purposeful livestock present during LR
cycling.
Chaetodon bennetti
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Re: Live Rock, curing... posted 10/20/08 Should I
have the skimmer on when I first put the live rock in my tank? <I would.>
I have a 1100mm x 400 x 400 sump under my tank, what would you recommend I put
in there. <Whatever you want or can fit.> Or should I leave it with
nothing and just use it for extra water volume and put all my equipment in it.
<Could do it either way, most put their skimmers, heaters, or any other
equipment they have in there.> Kenny <Chris>
A couple of
questions about live rock Live
Rock…Shipping/Storing/Curing – 09/29/08 Hi Eric (or whoever is on
duty), <<Hey Ken…Eric here>> In the past I had purchased rock locally here
in NJ even though it was more expensive than online, but I could pick the pieces
that I want. <<Of benefit>> I am going to set up a second tank (70 gal
Oceanic) and was thinking of buying the rock from Premium Aquatics. I heard that
they had nice rock. <<I believe I have heard the same>> My first question
has to do with the "life" that is said to come along with the cured rock. It was
my understanding (maybe incorrectly) that you should pull off any sponges or
macro algae and scrub the rock before putting it in your tank as it will most
likely die off anyway and prolong the process. <<This is a suggested part of
the curing process for new rock, yes…but not so much if the rock is indeed
already cured>> Also it would be a waste of time to aquascape and then pull
out the rock only to take a brush to it to get off the new die off. <<If you
suspect the rock is not cured you should cure it yourself in a separate
container…or be prepared to give the rock time to cure in the display before
proceeding with stocking>> What is the general consensus with regards to
this? Would you leave the life on it, or scrub it before putting it in the tank.
<<Well Ken, when setting up a new system it is “my” preference to place the rock
un-scrubbed in the display to cure. This method has its disadvantages re
nuisance alga growth and possible unwanted hitchhikers, but also yields the most
the most bio-diversity…in my opinion>> Below is a sample of what I would be
getting. http://www.premiumaquatics.com/live...ges/timora5.JPG
http://www.premiumaquatics.com/liverock_images/timora5.JPG
http://www.premiumaquatics.com/live...ges/timora1.JPG
http://www.premiumaquatics.com/liverock_images/timora1.JPG <<That is some
nice looking rock>> My second question has to do with how long rock can be
out of water but packed in bags and boxed? <<Obviously the longer the rock is
out of water the more life that may be compromised, but if kept wet at least,
some of the fauna will survive…even if only to “sprout anew” after some time in
your tank>> A very large and very successful store here in NJ said that they
stock rock that does not fit into their tank, bagged and boxed. He said that
rock generally comes from overseas and sits for weeks in boxes as some come by
ship since air freight is too expensive. <<I’ve heard of rock sitting on
docks for days (sometimes under saltwater spray…sometimes not) until boxed and
sold, and I’ve heard of the rock being wrapped in wet newspaper and then boxed
and shipped and “then” left to sit until sold…but I haven’t heard that any
actually comes by ship container>> I know airfreight is expensive but never
heard of rock coming by container. <<Me neither…but it wouldn’t surprise
me…and probably no worse than “storing” it for weeks. But of course this rock
won’t be as good as rock shipped fresh from the source to your door. And it
certainly shouldn’t be as expensive…but that doesn’t mean it is not of use>>
Normally I would not even ponder this and ask this question if it had come from
someone other than the person that told me this. These people do have a large
assortment of great shaped rocks and I would give this place a consideration
except what they are saying seems to go against everything I have always heard.
It's not like they are selling their rock as "dry rock". Please feel free to
remove the link and store name if you do not like to mention
retailers/wholesalers. <<This is not a problem>> If this is Eric, my 90
gallon SPS tank is not two years old and looks amazing. <<Ah great…I remember
discussing this when I was in Kona last (Yikes! Has it been that long since my
last trip?)>> You were right about anemones and corals. I finally realized
and got it out of my tank after a few months. <<Ah…good>> Now if I could
only get out the maroon clown (tiger shark disguised in a cute fish body).
<<Can be little beasties for sure>> Thanks very much. Regards, Ken
<<Good to hear from you again, Ken. Be chatting, EricR>>
R2: Live Rock…Shipping/Storing/Curing
- 10/01/08 Hi Eric, <<Hey Ken>> I just want to clarify before
I do order this rock tomorrow. They said that the rock is cured and I imagine
that I should be able to tell by the way it smells, or doesn't smell when it
arrives? <<Yes…though new fresh rock from the sea will also not smell bad
when you get it, but would still need curing>> If I do leave on the
macroalgae, is it all good or is some of it nuisance algae? <<Some macroalgae
can be invasive, in particular Caulerpa species, but what I saw in the pictures
looked okay…and probably won’t last long once herbivores are introduced to the
system>> If so, how can I differentiate the good from the bad? <<Not
always easy…but I think you have little concern here. And any macroalgae that
does survive will help with nutrient export/controlling the inevitable nuisance
alga succession>> Also what is to say that these algae will actually grow in
my tank rather than die? <<Indeed…no guarantees. Do remove if it makes you
more comfortable>> Is it safe to say it will live, leave it on, and see what
happens? <<I would, were this me/mine>> If some of the pieces that I will
be using on the bottom of the tank as a foundation does have macroalgae, should
this be removed as I would assume that they may not get much light there at all.
<<Removing any that may be “buried” is best, yes>> When the terms nuisance
pests are used, I assume we mean visual? <<Ha! If only it were always that
easy… Some unwelcome hitchhikers/pests can come from within the nooks and
crannies of the rock…only to be discovered days to weeks after introduction.
But…if the rock has been well cured, this is of less concern as most will
“likely” have been discovered/removed by now…or simply starved>> Is there
something that you can think of that if I see it, I should definitely remove?
<<Predatory crabs/shrimp come to mind… Do see this article on live rock here
(http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_2/cav2i3/Live_Rock/live_rock.htm) and look
among the links here (http://www.wetwebmedia.com/invertidfaqs.htm) >> I just
realized that I asked a ton of questions. <<No worries mate…and much info
than I can pass here is posted on the site>> I am used to getting rock that
is totally void of everything and now I am going in the other direction.
<<Mmm, I see… Well, this rock will be of much more interest, I assure you>> I
just want to make sure that I get started on the right foot. Thanks again.
Regards, Ken <<Be chatting. EricR>>
Live Rock, curing 9/28/08 Dear Crew, <Hi
Oliver, Mich here.> First of all congratulations with your fantastic website,
WWM and Bob's book did teach me almost everything I know about this beautiful
hobby. <You, me and many others.> I recently moved to Egypt and decided to
set up a reef tank. <Congrats! Egypt is beautiful. I spent several weeks
there this May, even had a marriage proposal from a local, much to my boyfriends
chagrin!> I am having a 35 gallon tank, 2 Fluval canister filters, <I
would recommend a sump here instead of a canister filter if at all possible.>
Macro Aqua Protein skimmer, chiller (very necessary here !!), <Oh yes, I'm
well aware.> 2 powerheads, 40 pounds of live rock and a deep sand bed. My
tank will be live rock and some small fish. I want to keep the bioload low.
<Wise of you.> My questions are related to live rock / curing live rock. I
did do a lot of research on your site but did not find the exact answers so I
hope you can help me out. <OK.> 2 days ago I bought the 40 pounds of live
rock. Unfortunately uncured LR, as cured one seems impossible to find here. The
LR looks great with lots and lots of coralline algae on it. It smelled quite
fresh and was probably just collected 2 days earlier so the decaying process did
not start yet. <Or may be quite limited.> I rinsed everything in salt
water and removed as much as possible decaying parts and put in a container with
strong powerhead and aggressive skimming. First I put the container outside
(because I was afraid of bad smell and because the owner of the shop advised me
to do so) but after 2 hours I noticed water temperature was almost 90 degree
F.... <Yikes!> I hope this did not kill my LR ??? <Well, didn't help
but hopefully didn't do too much damage in that short of time.> Once I
noticed I immediately put the container inside and the temperature is now 80
degree F. <Ahhh! Much better!> Ok, I put the container back inside and do
plan to leave it there. <Very good.> My container has no extra lighting.
<Will be fine.> I did read in one of your articles that curing LR can
best be done in a poorly lit container. <Well, it limits algae growth, which
is often a nuisance algae to start with!> I was just wondering if the lack of
light is not going to affect the coralline algae on my LR ? <It may to a
degree but shouldn't be too detrimental.> As said, they are really beautiful
and I understand from your website that curing LR can take a while. <Doesn't
sound like you will have much die off from how you describe the rock. Test your
ammonia/nitrate/nitrite levels. I wouldn't be too surprised if you rock was done
cycling.> Can they survive without extra lighting for several weeks?
<Yes.> I do regular ammonium checks and do water changes whenever needed.
<When you get your tank up and running it is better to get in the habit of doing
frequent partial water changes, as you are likely losing trace elements that you
are not testing for and the easiest and most economical way to replace them is
via water exchange. More here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/scottsh2ochgart.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/watchgantart.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/water.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/nutrientcontrol.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/marine/maintenance/marineMaint.htm > Do you think
this is OK or should I add extra supplements? <I would not add any
supplements I wasn't testing for. How do you know if you are over or under
dosing? In my opinion, frequent water changes are the best way to go.> While
I am curing the LR in the container, my display tank is operational with sand
bed inside and filters running. I was wondering what would be the difference if
I would cure the LR not in the container but in the tank ? Would this be
harmful? <No and this is what I would recommend you doing in this situation.>
Nitrates accumulating in sand and filter media and difficulties to remove them?
<The LR will help breakdown Nitrates along with other chemicals that could
build up.> I ask this question because honestly I do not see immediately the
difference between curing in a container or curing in my tank. <There really
isn't any.> My container is quite big and the quantity of water I have to
change would not be that different from the water changes I would have to do
when using my display tank for curing the LR. I hope this is not a stupid
question -) <No it is not a stupid question. It is rather well thought out,
though I think you've come to the answer quite effectively on your own. Enjoy
your time and Egypt and be careful driving!> Thanks a lot !! <Welcome!>
Olivier Dubois <Michelle Lemech>
Live Rock Cycling/Curing 9/2/08 Hi, <Hello>
I purchased 88lbs live rock online 8/25/08 and it arrived at my house two days
later on 8/27/08 9am. I opened the box, removed some dead sponges and anything I
can get my hands on. Then, I gave them a SW bath to remove whatever was left. I
placed it in a 35gal tub with 1.025SW and 79° with a total flow of 1100gph. Two
days later (8/29/08), I test for Nitrite and Nitrate and they are at the maximum
levels my test kits would read (Tetra Test). The next day (day 3), I purchased a
NH4 test kit and tested the water and it read between 0 and .25mg/l. Day 5, I do
a 12 gallon water change and test NH4, NO2 and NO3 again and I get 0-.25mg/l,
max, max respectively. Why is my Nitrite and Nitrate so high on the 5th day of
cycling? <The rock is just processing the ammonia, going through the natural
cycle. So long as there is detectable ammonia there will likely be detectible
nitrite. All will of course end up as nitrate.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/estbiofiltmar.htm> Is something wrong or do I have
a weird cycle where the NH4 spike and decline took place in 2 days? <No,
this is normal rock curing.> When should I do water changes? <There are no
hard rules, just to keep the ammonia as low as possible to keep as much life as
you can on the rock. Do run a skimmer if you have one and check out this link
for more info on LR curing.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_2/cav2i3/Live_Rock/live_rock.htm>
Thanks! <Welcome, Scott V.>
Reusing Live
(probably dead now..) Rock, 8/22/08
Hey Crew,
<Hi>
It's been a while now since I've written, unfortunately a couple months back I
had to shut my old 75 gallon tank down due to "personal issues".... However now,
I have all of that taken care of and I am ready to start her back up, full blown
reef this time!
<Nice>
(I actually plan on Soft Corals and Mushrooms to begin with, O.K. mix?)
<Can work fine.>
Now, to my question, when I took the tank down, I took out all of the LR and
placed it in my backyard and it has now been sitting there for probably half a
year withstanding all of the weather conditions we get here in Florida. What
would be the best way to clean this rock off, as in kill everything on it
(algaes, snails, even a little frog) and possibly use it in my new tank as base
rock, with real LR on top, or scattered throughout it to seed it?
<I would soak it in a freshwater/bleach solution for a couple days, rinse well,
soak in freshwater and chlorine remover, rinse again, and you should be ok.
Scrub off any dead material you see with a wire brush to try to limit adding it
to the new tank.>
Is this even plausible to be using this old rock, I hope so, because buying 90~
more pounds of LR would be devastating to the wallet!
<Should work fine as long as you are willing to be patient and let a little bit
of new live rock seed it.>
Thanks,
Christian
<Welcome>
<Chris>
Curing Live Rock 8/7/08
Hello, I'm in the process of setting up my 135g RR tank. I'm curing 200 lbs
of live rock that I bought from DrsFosterandSmith. I have a 1200 mag return
pump and a 1200 Maxijet for water circulation. External skimmer is running full
capacity through a 30 gal sump (will be refugium).
<If you are not running a skimmer it can work wonders here.>
I scrubbed the rock before putting it into my tank w/ salt tapwater. After two
days I did 100% water change, scrubbed the rock again and added live sand before
putting the rock back in. Then filled the tank w/ RO saltwater from my LFS. It
turns out the water they sold me was bad. Ammonia was 0, but Nitrites were 25
(yes, 25......there's no point in there) they were off the charts high.
<Did you test this water beforehand? Do you know if it is the water or
conditions in your tank?>
And PH was almost zero.
<!>
Did their bad water ruin my tank?
<No, but a large water change is in order.>
Everybody keeps telling me "Just be patient and leave it alone". Well, it's
been 4 days and my rocks are turning green and the water is green. I don't have
any lights on in the tank. Last night I did a 60% water change w/ RO from LFS
(this time w/ good levels). But my Nitrites are still off the chart too high,
reaching 25 instantly.
<Indicative of the tank conditions, not the water you received.>
My concern is that the ammonia never had a chance to run its cycle before the
nitrites invaded.
<Nitrite is part of that cycle.>
When are the nitrates going to start kicking in????
<Soon, if not already.>
Should I "Just be patient and leave it alone?" I'm worried that all my rock is
going to be green. BTW, it's not hairy green.....it's more like purple
coralline algae, except it's green. Thanks, Susie
<Welcome, a link explaining the process below, Scott V.>
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_2/cav2i3/Live_Rock/live_rock.htm
Re: Curing Live Rock 8/7/08
Hello, I'm in the process of setting up my 135g RR tank. I'm curing 200 lbs
of live rock that I bought from DrsFosterandSmith. I have a 1200 mag return pump
and a 1200 Maxijet for water circulation. External skimmer is running full
capacity through a 30 gal sump (will be refugium).
<If you are not running a skimmer it can work wonders here.>
>????<
<<A skimmer will help your water quality, even whilst curing rock. This in turn
keeps more of the fauna on the rock around.>>
I scrubbed the rock before putting it into my tank w/ salt tapwater. After two
days I did 100% water change, scrubbed the rock again and added live sand before
putting the rock back in. Then filled the tank w/ RO saltwater from my LFS. It
turns out the water they sold me was bad. Ammonia was 0, but Nitrites were 25
(yes, 25......there's no point in there) they were off the charts high.
<Did you test this water beforehand? Do you know if it is the water or
conditions in your tank?>
>Yes, my tank water was showing high Ammonia before I added the LFS water.
I tested LFS RO water straight from the jug and that's when I saw high levels of
Nitrites.
Now my Ammonia is zero and Nitrites crazy high.<
<<It is possible you did not get great water. As the ammonia is converted to
nitrite the ammonia will lower and nitrite will go up. The same will soon happen
with nitrite to nitrate.>>
And PH was almost zero.
<!>
Did their bad water ruin my tank?
<No, but a large water change is in order.>
>Can I do my water changes w/ tapwater? I read somewhere in your forum that you
can cure live rock w/ tapwater.<
<<As in mixed with a salt mix? Sure, if it is either aged or not chlorinated.>>
Everybody keeps telling me "Just be patient and leave it alone". Well, it's been
4 days and my rocks are turning green and the water is green. I don't have any
lights on in the tank. Last night I did a 60% water change w/ RO from LFS (this
time w/ good levels). But my Nitrites are still off the chart too high, reaching
25 instantly.
<Indicative of the tank conditions, not the water you received.>
My concern is that the ammonia never had a chance to run its cycle before the
nitrites invaded.
<Nitrite is part of that cycle.>
When are the nitrates going to start kicking in????
<Soon, if not already.>
>Is good to have this green coralline algae in my tank?<
<<No, it is not coralline. You will lose some through the curing process,
improving the water quality will help keep as much as you can.>>
>Should I keep doing water changes to get rid of the green water?<
<<Yes.>>
Should I "Just be patient and leave it alone?" I'm worried that all my rock is
going to be green. BTW, it's not hairy green.....it's more like purple coralline
algae, except it's green. Thanks, Susie
<Welcome, a link explaining the process below, Scott V.>
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_2/cav2i3/Live_Rock/live_rock.htm
>Thanks so much for all your help - you Rock!!! And you keep this awesome hobby
alive, b/c w/o you most people would be tempted to give up. The marine
industries are forever indebted to you!<
<<Wow, you are very welcome and thank you, Scott V.>>
Re: Caribbean biotope stocking plan/cycling
Stocking and Cycling Live Rock 6/13/08
Yo Scott!
<Right back at ya!>
One last question (for now!):
<No problem.>
I'm planning on purchasing some live rock and sand that are ocean cultured. I
know this can be iffy, as there could be some BAD hitchhikers. I plan to allow
for a long cycling process in order to watch out for them.
<Yup...It's never a bad idea to quarantine all newly purchased livestock before
placing it in the display aquarium.>
However, with the ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate spikes that occur during
cycling, I am afraid that putting nice rock with all kinds of life on it (and
some die-off as well) at the same time as everything else will kill off all of
the good stuff.
<Well, you generally want to cure live rock in a separate vessel. There will be
significant die off before the populations of micro and macro fauna on the rocks
rebound.>
The question is: Should I cycle the tank with base rock and some live sand, then
incorporate ocean cultured sand and rock later, hoping it won't spike too badly,
or should it all go in at the same time?
Thanks again!
Darby
<I typically will cycle my rock outside of the display, to minimize the impact
of the die off that inevitably occurs during this time. Then, it's a simple
matter of adding all of the rock that you intend to use at one time. There are
certainly other ways to approach this, but that's my technique. Alternatively,
you could consider using some of the "dead" rock that is available on line now,
such as Marco Rock, which is much less expensive than "live" rock, and will
recruit desirable life forms and algae over time, particularly if you add some
"live" rock along with it. Something to consider, I think! Best of luck with
your efforts! Regards, Scott F.>
Nitrates & Stupidity 6/10/08
Hi I hope you can help me with a nitrate problem.
<Should be able to.>
I have been reading your articles & trying to follow your input. I have a 90g
tank which I started 1 1/2 years ago. I started with a Rena 3 filter, Skilter
protein skimmer & 2 Zoomed Powersweep powerheads with filters. I added 75 lbs
live rock and after cycling added 40 lbs live sand. After the tank cycled I
started adding small fish no more than 2 at a time. Things went wrong when I
believed a LFS person & added 50 lbs live rock, (about 7 months ago) directly to
the tank. Seems it wasn't really fully cured.
<It should never be considered cured, there is almost always die off just from
bringing it home/reorientation of the rock.>
After numerous water changes, adding a denitrification filter (after 4 months
gave up on it as the stink & the reduced ph made it impossible to live with) and
reading your column I slowly removed all the bio media, added a Pentair 300
fluidized bed filter & removed 1 powerhead (tank getting too warm) and went up
to a Remora protein skimmer.
<A far better choice in skimmer. We will talk about the fluidized bed in a bit.>
I have finally gotten the nitrates down to 20 but cannot get them further down.
I have 1 Sm Yellow Tang, 1 Sm Blue Tang, 3 sm. Chromis, 1 Sixline Wrasse, 1
Anthias, 2 tiny Scooter Blennies, 1 Mandarin Goby, 1 Rubyhead Wrasse, cleaner
crew of snails & hermit crabs, , 2-4" Maxima clams, Zoos, corals- Frogspawn,
Elegance, Bubble, Hammer, Fox, Open Brain, Yellow Leather, Green Leather, Clove
Polyp, 2 Ricordea, Green Star polyps, and a Bubble Anemone with Maroon Clown. I
have a euro braced acrylic tank so putting another filter will be hard as I
would have to cut into the bracing which only leaves some other type of canister
filter which of course brings up the fact that I would be buying another "thing"
to replace something that I already spent money on & frankly I am tired of
thinking I'm getting a good product just to have it not be right. (ie-Skilter
$99, denit.filter $175 & $225 flour. Light when I needed a MH light)
<Another filter will not solve the problem anyhow.>
So instead of trying/guessing/hoping I am simply going to ask someone who knows.
What the heck should I do??????
<Hmmm, much to say. First off, the fluidized bed can trap detritus and produce
nitrate just as the other biomedia, usually to a lesser extent. With the amount
of live rock you have I would remove all the biomedia and let the live rock do
the job. More of a natural approach that works very well. Next, your livestock
list is not only stocked quite high for a 90, which contributes to the nitrate
issue, but some in this mix just will not work. The Tangs will need more space
in time and it is pushing it having one Dragonet (Scooter and Mandarins) in a
system this size, three will starve in time. As for corals, the combination of
Leathers, Euphylliid and Anemones is quite noxious, it will lead to trouble in
time also.>
Maybe I should just ignore the nitrate test (API) because through all of this I
haven't lost any fish, or corals which all are growing, and have minimum brown
algae, but I really want some Birdsnest & Acro corals & I know they won't be
forgiving of bad water.
<Or the potential tankmates.>
Oh nitrite & ammo are reading 0.
<An indication that your current filtration is doing the job.>
Thanks for any input or suggestions you have.
<Very welcome.>
Down but not yet out!
Tina
<Hee, hang in there! Please see the link below and a quick search of WWM
regarding allelopathy will shed some light on the issues mentioned above. Best
of luck, Scott V.>
http://wetwebmedia.com/cnidcompppt.htm
Two schools of thought... tank breakdown, LR Curing 6/1/08
Hi Saltwater gurus! I am contemplating dismantling my 30 gallon reef tank due to
a severe outbreak of Valonia bubble algae.
<Mmm, I take it from context that your desire is to rid the system of the pest
algae>
The Valonia came into my tank on a piece of coral that I did not initially
notice. It's now everywhere! I have been advised by my retailer (two different
associates) that I can accomplish the tank breakdown two ways and I am not sure
which way is best. I want to get all new live rock and add new sand. I recognize
I should keep at the minimum some of my current sand. The Live rock I currently
have has so much of the Valonia that I want to toss it all. I cannot scrub or
pry it off, I've tried. I've been told I can cycle the new live rock for 2 weeks
in an aerated rubber tub, changing the salt water every couple of days to get
rid of die off.
<One approach>
Then once the water tests perfectly, do the swap very quickly to not stress my
livestock. The other suggestion was to remove my critters and place them in a
rubber tub. Then cycle the rock and new sand in the aquarium itself for about a
week using my Emperor 400 Bio wheel and my protein skimmer with lights etc...
This seems like it would stress my animals more, but would be more effective for
the cycling. I obviously do not want to harm my animals, I had them all two
years with no casualties. All the while I want to make sure I get every piece of
the Valonia out of my tank. Not an easy task, I can assure you.
<You tell me what I know>
Another question I have relates to my feather dusters. They popped up over the
past two years and I really enjoy them. How are they moved or better yet, how do
they deal with re-aquascaping? I have a medium cluster of 4 or 5 heads and then
a single feather duster. Are their tube bodies extensive below the surface of
the sand?
<Possibly>
Should I simply try to not to disturb as much of the surrounding sand. Can they
be moved if they are about the size of half of my pinky finger when fully
extended?
<Yes... dig up the entire tubes, move all>
I love this hobby, but am a bit overwhelmed by the thought of beginning this
process and different schools of thought on how to proceed. That's why I am
contacting the best.
Thanks for your suggestions and ideas... Lori in Tampa, FL
<Take your time in moving all, changing out water... I would go with the first
route of new LR curing. Bob Fenner>
Curing
live rock 5/31/08
Hi guys,
<Hello Sal!>
I'm in the process of curing live rock. I purchased 30 lbs and I just put it in
a trash can with approx 20 gals of water. I have two powerheads generating 840
gal per hour in flow. I am running carbon in there also. My question is
concerning my lack of a skimmer, which I know from reading all the FAQs is not
ideal.
<A skimmer is a good addition, personally considered required in my eyes.>
My ammonia is off the chart and nitrite is 0.
<Yikes.>
I have been doing 50% water changes daily since I got the rock ( 2 days ). I'm
trying to compensate for not having a skimmer with these water changes and a lot
of water flow. Am I doing the right thing here?
<Yes.>
Are 50% daily water changes ok?
<They are, I will go out on a limb here, I have done (hence the recommendation
for skimming) and would recommend a 100% water change daily if your ammonia is
so high.>
Would increasing the volume of water the rock is sitting in be a significant
help?
<Yes, it can be, assuming your makeup water is ammonia free.>
Do I need to be adding sodium bicarbonate if my water changes are 50% daily?
<Not likely with any decent salt.>
Thank you very much for your help.
Long time fan of WWM,
Sal Spinnato
<Welcome, Scott V.>
Re: Curing live rock 6/1/08
Hi,
<Hello again.>
Thank you very much for the info.
<Welcome.>
I appreciate your help. So I'm going to continue daily 50 - 100% water changes
until I can keep my ammonia under 1.0. Does this sound right? Also, should I
continue large water changes if nitrite is over 10?
<Yes and yes, keep these numbers low to keep as much life as possible on the
rock.>
Sal
<Have fun, Scott V.>
Live rock DIY curing
05/21/08
Hi Crew!
<Doug>
I managed to acquire three tanks from someone getting out of the hobby for free
- 225 gallons total. This is a big step from my current 10 gallon tank.
<I'll say!>
At current market prices in my area, enough live rock for this setup would run
me nearly two thousand dollars. I know that some aquarists would say I should be
more concerned with a solid setup than the bottom line, but unfortunately, I'm
just not in a position to spend the same amounts of money as many of the other
hard-core aquarists in my area, as I'm still in school full-time. Anyway, my
plan was to have a "show layer" of live rock that consisted of 30 lbs of Tonga
or so, and then the rest of it be a DIY
"foundation layer".
<Can be done... easily>
First, wouldn't it be possible to "make" my own live rock by getting 20 or so
pounds of refugium rubble along with a couple cups of substrate from my current
established setup, placing it all in a big Rubbermaid container with a heater
and some higher-SG water, and then throwing some rock in and not touching it for
a month or so?
<Mmm, yes... or directly in the tanks themselves>
Various sites I've read around the web suggest a process along these lines, but
I trust you guys/gals the most.
Secondly, what type of rock would be a good candidate for curing?
<The best... reef "base rock"... mainly calcium carbonate... can likely be had
for about a dollar a pound in quantity... Other sources of CaCO3... limestone...
quartzes of some sorts... dolomitious materials (composites of calcium and
magnesium carbonates>
I can get my hands on about 80 pounds of fossilized wood,
<Mmm... I'd skip on this... very beautiful, most are principally silicates
(SiO2), but there are often other undesirable components of lesser constituency>
but I don't exactly have easy access to pieces of dead coral in the DC area.
When I dig around in the woods behind my house, I see a lot of shale/slate
material, which I think I would want to avoid. Any advice on where to start
looking and what to look for in candidate specimens would be most appreciated.
Thanks in advance for your consideration!
-DS
<Please take the long read here: http://wetwebmedia.com/marinvind1.htm
scroll down to the section/s on Live Rock. Bob Fenner>
Please help...Live Rock Concern... prep.,
water quality... 05/02/2008
I have a new 55 gallon salt water aquarium, no fish yet, sand bottom, 2
Hydor 400gph centrifugal pumps, and base rock all of which have been in place
for over a month and salinity and water tests all within normal ranges. This
past Friday (3 days ago) I placed into my aquarium some beautiful, colorful
dense live rock that I ordered and had shipped to my home. The rock was packed
in a plastic container wrapped in a damp towel.
<<Sounds good>>
I scrubbed the rock with Kent Marine rock prep and rinsed it in salt water
before placing it into my aquarium.
<<Rinsing in just saltwater will suffice, no need to waste money on other
products>>
The rock is arranged to allow optimum filtration/circulation and I have added
Kent Marine Liquid Calcium, Iodine and Strontium & Molybdenum as directed on the
packaging as well as one 5ml of PurpleUp Coralline Algae Accelerator one time.
<<Stop adding these additives, there is no need. Only add trace elements when
your water test results, e.g. Calcium, dictate that additives are required.
Leave the "purple Up" out completely as there is no need. Good basic water
parameters and sufficient lighting will provide coralline algae>>
In about 24 hours the water was once again clear in appearance and yesterday my
water tested as follows: Ammonia 8, pH 7.7, Nitrite 0, Nitrate 1.
<<Wow, that's a high level off ammonia. There must of been a large amount of
die-off form the newly added live rock>>
I have noticed just a very few worms at night but nothing that seems uncommon
based off my research. Up to 48 hours after placing the live rock into my
aquarium everything appeared to be looking good. This morning I came to check
things out and at least 80% of the surface area of one larger piece of my rock
is completely blanketed in a fuzzy sort of cotton-like white substance. The
substance even grew completely over a purplish colored worm that was attached to
the rock. Another rock not in contact with the fuzz covered rock is beginning to
show small spots of this same white substance.
Can you please advise what you believe this substance to be and how I should
address the issue?
<<Its algae growth, remove it with an old tooth brush attached to the end of a
syphon hose, scrub the rock and the syphon will draw out the algae>>
Thank you for your time and expertise~ Monica
<<Thanks for the questions, hope this helps. Regards, A Nixon>>
Curing Live Rock In The
Display Aquarium? 3/30/08
Hello,
<Hi there! Scott F. in today!>
Thanks again for all the wonderful help. The other day I received about 22lbs of
Fiji live rock and I was curing in two 5gal buckets for about one day. I ran
into a problem that I needed the buckets for some other issues and I had to
place the live rock in my display tank. Tank is 46 gal running for about a month
with about 10lbs of cured live rock. I also seeded the tank from my old tank.
Also, no fish had been added but I have been feeding some food for pods to grow.
<Good. You don't really want fishes or invertebrates residing in the system in
which you are curing the live rock.>
I was originally going to cure the rock outside the tank and let a new Flame
Angel and some new snails that I bought with the live rock help settle the
display tank. (I also have the problem of looking at a tank with nothing in it).
<I understand your thoughts, but you really don't want to "cycle" a system with
fishes. There are alternatives which are covered in this sight and elsewhere.>
I have an Aqua C Remora Skimmer w/ Maxi-jet 1200 powering it, two Maxi-jet 1200
with Hydor Flow rotators for current, aqua clear 30 near the bottom, and also
active carbon filter that is off of an old eclipse tank that I had. I have an
aragonite sand bed that is about 5" in the back of tank and less than an 1" in
the front.
<Sounds fine. If you are going to use mechanical filtration (ie; the Aqua
Clear), you'll need to make sure that the media contained within it are
cleaned/replaced regularly.>
The idea behind what I have described is to try to keep nutrients to a minimum
and to also remove unwanted organics from the water to prevent an ammonia spike
and kill/crash the tank.
<Please do utilize protein skimming to help remove many organic compounds before
they have a chance to accumulate. This will go a long way towards cycling the
aquarium efficiently.>
My main concern is that I won't be able to keep the ammonia down during the
curing period. I don't have many other options available to cure the rock in so
I am against the wall. Can you suggest any ideas on how to keep the tank from
crashing?
<As above. Protein skimming is your first line of defense and, when used in
conjunction with chemical filtration media (ie; activated carbon/Polyfilter,
etc.), plays a near priceless role in water quality management. I would NOT keep
any fishes in the aquarium while the rock is curing. Find alternative homes for
them during this process. BTW, we have tremendous volumes of information about
live rock curing here on WWM, so do spend a bit of time searching on this topic
here on the site.> Unfortunately I thought about everything ahead of time but
like other things those plans didn't work out.
<Well, it's important to be flexible. Do consider the minor tweaks that we
discussed here.> I appreciate any help you can give.
<A pleasure. Regards, Scott F.>
|
One bad apple...er, rock.
Live Rock Curing 3/24/08
Folks,
<Scott>
Many thanks for your timely assistance in the past, and I hope you don't
mind what I trust will be a quick question.
<Nope.>
I'm in the process of setting up a 90-gallon FOWLR. Got the rock 11 days
ago, cleaned it off, removed all the obvious dead stuff. The ammonia
levels spiked immediately and have remained at 8.0 since day three, with
nitrites coming up to just .50.
<Not unusual at all, mine took almost two weeks before ammonia levels
dropped to 0.>
I've done three 50 percent water changes, while removing and gently
scrubbing the rock twice (I can't do larger water changes, since copper
in our well water requires us to use R/O water, and the filter simply
isn't that fast).
<Would be of great benefit using a skimmer in the curing tank along with
activated carbon.>
I went over the rock again today, and most have a fairly clean smell,
with one or two still holding a whiff of hydrogen sulfide. One
exceptionally large, attractive piece, though, still has an overpowering
sulfide smell -- I assume a dead burrowing clam or sponge is holed up
deep inside where I can't see or reach.
<More than likely.>
I've placed the offending rock in a bucket of saltwater; would it make
sense to try to cycle that one separately, with a heater and aeration?
Or has more than a week and a half at lethal ammonia level pretty much
fried everything anyway, and I should just leave it in the tank to
continue to cycle there?
<I would leave be with the other rock, why rush the process creating
more work for yourself, it does take time. Eventually, you will see new
life emerging from the rock once the curing process is complete and the
rock is placed in the main system.>
I figure there's no way any macro-inverts (tubeworms, etc.) have
survived such high ammonia levels. I saw dead bristle worms by the
second or third day.
Any guidance would be appreciated. Meanwhile, I'm keeping the smelly
rock sequestered in its bucket.
<A good article here on live rock and curing. Do read.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_2/cav2i3/Live_Rock/live_rock.htm
Thanks,
<You're welcome. James (Salty Dog)>
Scott
Re: Live Rock Curing
3/25/08
James,
<Scott>
Thanks for the very prompt reply. I'd scoured the FAQs on the WWM site,
but got the impression that such a high ammonia reading for such a
prolonged period was unusual. Glad to hear it's not.
><Not unusual at all, mine took almost two weeks before ammonia levels
dropped to 0.>
><Would be of great benefit using a skimmer in the curing tank along
with activated carbon.>
I should have mentioned -- I've been skimming hard since I started the
curing process, and have been using activated charcoal.
<Good>
><A good article here on live rock and curing. Do read.
>http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_2/cav2i3/Live_Rock/live_rock.htm
In fact, that was one of the articles that rang the biggest alarm bells
for me, since it talks about doing water changes to keep the ammonia
level as close to zero as possible -- something I haven't been able to
come close to. The line about high ammonia "leaving you with base rock
devoid of everything except bacteria" is what I've been concerned about.
<Understand here. May be worth the extra money to get cured live rock.
You will still have some die off but it will be minimal.>
Thanks again,
<You're welcome. James (Salty Dog)>
Scott |
|
Re: new setup 3/9/08
Hey Anthony,
<<Andrew...>
Any suggestions on buying live rock for a new setup? I want to buy about 100
pounds for my 90 gallon. I was also wondering if I can cure it in the tank, and
how exactly would that be done?
<<This all depends on the tank regards livestock. If its void of livestock,
then, buy either cured or uncured, makes no difference. If its uncured, simply
cure it in the tank, and keep up with water changes. The choice of live rock is
really down to availability and preference. Fiji is one of the most common types
of rock. However, more and more are starting to go for aquacultured live rock
now. In all reality, this is a good form of rock to choose as it has zero impact
on the reefs around the world.
Thanks again for your help. John
<<Hope this helps. A Nixon>>
Re: Filtration Challenge
03/10/2008
Good morning Andrew.
<<Hi...>>
I haven't purchased the live rock yet, but I was figuring about 85 to 100 lbs.
(35 lbs. from my current 55 gal. tank plus 50 or 60 lbs. new).
<<If you shoot for about 125lbs in there, there will be no need for the added
wet/dry filtration and you can use one of the below tanks as a refugium perhaps
and the other for the skimmer.. Just a couple of options there for you>>
<<Thanks for the follow up. A Nixon>>
Re: Filtration Challenge
03/10/2008... chatting... referral...
Sounds like live rock is the way to go. One last follow up . . . My LFS
keeps the live rock in a big bath. It looks brown and lifeless until you take it
home and clean the mud off. It has some coralline algae and other little signs
of life but it doesn't quite look like what you see in the books. Do you think
this live rock will provide decent filtration or should I try to buy something
fancier like the decorator rock they sell at liverocknreef.com?
<<What you have described above is what a lot of live rock starts out
like. Its
mainly like this because of the conditions its stored in. Once its in your tank
and established, with good lighting etc etc you'll get nice coralline growth (
Pinks, purples etc etc ) and critters>>
Thanks again, Brendon
<<Thanks. A Nixon>>
|
Water Changes, LR curing,
Stocking 2/19/08
Too many suggestions, I'm getting confused. I have a 65 gallon tank with 85
lbs of live rock. I've waited my 6 weeks actually 7 now. I was told by one shop
not to change the water continuously but to top up when it evaporated which I
did, I was also told not to put the lights on. I did my testing and everything
was fine.
<OK, this is one approach to curing rock. Personally I prefer many water changes
and keeping the rock lit to save as much life on the rock as possible.>
A couple of days ago I went to another shop and was given different information,
came home and turned on the lights. Brown algae is turning up (wondered why we
didn't have any), little things are coming out of the rock, and I did a 5 gallon
water change. I have 20 hermit crabs and a star polyp, everything is fine so
far.
Questions
I know I need snails, would I be better to get snails and not ad more crabs?
<Sparingly, you definitely do not need any more crabs, they will put any snails
at risk.>
With our tank size how much water change would you recommend, I'm planning on
weekly. Is this correct?
<Yes, about 10%, with a larger change in order now. Test your nitrate and
perform water changes until the level is down (say 5 ppm or lower).>
I am not rushing, just reading a lot.
<I will refer you to more.>
Thank you for your help
Marilee
<Welcome, some links below for you to explore, Scott V.>
http://wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_2/cav2i3/Live_Rock/live_rock.htm
http://wetwebmedia.com/gastropo.htm
http://wetwebmedia.com/marine/inverts/arthropoda/crabs/hermitcrabs.htm
Re: Water Changes, LR curing,
Stocking 2/20/08
You truly are a god send to newbie's as well as those more experienced.
Many thanks again
Marilee
<Thank you for the kind words and writing, Scott V.>
Feed Live Rock? (I Would!) –
01/24/08
Hello!
<<Hey!>>
I recently set up a 20 gallon marine aquarium.
<<Neat!>>
I have a hang-on-tank filter, a skimmer, and 20 lbs. live rock.
<<Okay>>
I wanted to set up the tank with the live rock and wait a few weeks before
purchasing any fish or invertebrates, just to get a "feel" for the equipment,
maintaining the water quality, etc.
<<Indeed…and maybe to let the tank “cycle?” Do also consider waiting a few
“months” before adding any fishes. This will give emergent life in and on the
rock some time to establish…and can provide some very interesting observation of
its own>>
The problem is that a multitude of living creatures came with the rock.
<<Ah yes!>>
I have probably 3 or 4 brittle stars with brown & tan striped "legs", 3 or 4
tiny white brittle stars, one six- "legged" starfish about the size of a dime, a
red & white striped shrimp, and lots of little worms and copepods.
<<Very cool>>
I asked the guy at the aquarium shop who sold me the rock what if anything I
should be feeding these things, and all he said was "maybe some flakes for the
shrimp", and not to feed the brittle stars anything.
<<Mmm, must say I disagree… Not feeding these organisms (as well as the many you
haven’t seen yet) will limit their ability to reproduce as well as cause them to
turn on one another/other emergent life for food. The “flakes” are okay, but for
this type of feeding (much like feeding a refugium) I like to utilize shrimp
pellets. They sink easily, and most everything finds something they like about
them. Just a few a day will do>>
I also have what appear to be almost-microscopic tube worms or anemones (sorry
no pics).
<<Likely the former>>
I know brittle stars eat "leftovers" and detritus, but since I don't have any
fish, I don't have any leftovers!
<<Indeed…but the brittle stars “love” shrimp pellets
I've had the rock and creatures for about a week. I've fed the shrimp and stars
some marine flakes I bought at PetCo, and they've been eating them. My question
is, how often (if at all) and what should I feed these things?
<<As explained>>
I don't want to foul the water, but I don't want them to starve.
<<Agreed…but a few pellets a day should be fine and will do little to extend the
Nitrogen cycle (you are monitoring this, yes?)
I've been feeding them about every other evening. Too much?
<<Nope>>
Too little?
<<Probably not>>
Am I doing it all wrong?
<<You’re doing fine>>
I've found conflicting info online, and my 2 local aquarium store owners are no
help!
<<Mmm, yes…differences of opinions…and no different here [grin]>>
Sorry this e-mail's so long!
<<No worries>>
Mandy
<<Regards, EricR>>
Re: Dancing with the Devil -
New Tank and curing LR, and now, Reef stkg. 1/15/08
Hi Scott,
Thanks for the advice.
<Very welcome Ranjith.>
Since there is a DSB, will it not digest the nitrates by the time the rock
cures?
<Theoretically it could over time with no other nitrate being produced. The
reality is that it will not consume nitrates at the rate they will likely be
produce curing rock. You will need some water changes, and should anyhow.>
That is the main point of the DSB right? To control nitrates.
<Yes.>
I agree there will be a lot of nitrates but left alone, the DSB should digest
all of it right?
<Over time.>
Also, what made you conclude that anaerobic activity was going on?
<Hmm.. mentioned as a possibility. Actually unlikely at the depth we were
talking about.>
Any idea how I can keep the beach sand from flying around?
<Only by controlling where and how your tank’s flow is dispersed.>
Will it help if I add slightly larger particle substrate around half inch above
the sand?
<This can help, but in an active reef tank the smaller particles will eventually
resurface. Larger particles may also act as a detritus trap.>
I plan to make this by using the mixer to grind some crushed coral.
That should help in culturing larger pods as well right?
<Somewhat, a refugium is better for this purpose.>
Regarding the surge
You think I should reduce the volume?
<No, it sounds like a good plan.>
I was thinking of an interval of 15-30 odd seconds between surges.
Faster in the day and slower at night.
<OK, will be fine.>
I plan to keep the following critters.
1. Zooanthids and sea mats (around 10 varieties fragged to create the multi
colour mix)
<You may want to place these on rocks separated from the main aquascaping.
Although they are quite nice, they can multiply very fast and become quite a
nuisance.>
2. Mushrooms - (around 5-6 varieties fragged to create the multi colour mix)
3. Leather coral (mushroom leather, finger leather)- 2-3 pieces grown from
frags.
4. elegance coral and hammer coral - one each
<I urge you to skip the elegance, read the link below.>
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/elegance.htm
5. sea pen (maybe) – one
<Difficult to keep.>
6. xenia
7. star polyps
8. Feather dusters (as many as possible :D)
9. Fromia Indica starfish - 2
10. Shrimps (4-6)
<What kind?>
11. black serpent stars - 2
12. 1 giant clam
<Careful with placement. Many species will need to be placed directly under your
light.>
13. blue branching sponge
<Again, any specific sponge? Some are much more suitable than others for
aquaria.>
Fishes:
1. Group of fairy wrasse (3-5)
2. Trio of multispined dwarf angel
< Centropyge multispinus? Nice fish, but stick with only one. Too many
territoriality issues here.>
3. Regal tang - 1
4. Long nose Hawkfish – 1
<This fish may put some of your inverts in danger.>
5. Pair of Sebae clowns or skunk clowns
<Go for tank bred Sebaes if possible.>
6. Bi-color blenny - 1
Can you suggest any butterfly that would leave the above mentioned
corals alone along with the feather dusters?
<One of the longnose butterflies should work, but will be pushing the tank’s
long term capacity in my opinion.>
An anemone for the clowns would surely be out of the question right?
<With all the mix above, I wouldn’t.>
Cheers again
Ranjith
< I hope this helps, Scott V.>
Live Rock Cycling
1/9/08
Thank you Scott F. :) I just got your reply. I was laughing my ass off! I
didn't realize how many times I said totally awesome! That was too funny! I
guess I'm really excited about this new "challenge".
<I'm really excited for you on the new adventure! Geek that I am, I get stoked
when fellow fish geeks start an exciting new project!>
Thank you for the compliments. In the pic the right side of the peak looks a lot
more tight than what it really is. I thought the same thing.
<Good. I had a feeling that it was more open than it looked! Overall, the
aquascape looks pretty good. I think it will really "pop" when the corals are
placed and start to establish.>
My ammonia is off the scale! I added more Prime, and 2 bags of ChemiPure in the
wet/dry filter. I'm afraid to do a water change. Won't that restart the whole
cycle over again? I am testing daily. It's now at 8.0! What should I do? Let it
run it's course since I only have snails and crabs or should I do a water
change?
<Well, I don't think that the snails will be too happy with this ammonia! If you
can find them an alternate home until the ammonia and nitrite return to
undetectable levels. I would hang in there and keep monitoring the water
quality. Such a spike is completely normal when establishing a new system with
live rock. Just be patient and stay on top of things.> Thank you so much for
your help!! YOU ARE TOTALLY AWESOME! ;)
Rachel S.
<Well, like- thanks! Regards, Scott F.>
Cooked LR... Life Remains –
11/17/07
Hello,
<Hi Joe, Mich here.>
I just have a simple live rock question. I happened to be curing 40 pounds of LR
in a 10 gallon tank when the heater went (stuck on).
<Ooops!>
The readout on the thermometer was 109.5 F!!!
<Yiiikes!>
As I pulled the rock out and placed them into buckets, the water definitely felt
hot.
<I'm sure it did!>
Is it safe to assume that I have 40 pounds of base rock now or could anything
have survived the intense heat?
<You might be surprised. You certainly have lost a good deal of the life in this
rock, but I think there may still be quite a bit of life remaining. Many
microscopic organisms can survive intense conditions, thus the reason Autoclaves
are used... which increases temperature and pressure so liquids can be heated
beyond their boiling points.>
I returned them to the tank with fresh water and a new heater. I'm afraid I know
the answer but just wanted to be sure for I have not seen a sign of life in the
week that has passed since.
<Likely most of your macroscopic life has perished but there may still be some
on the microscopic level.>
Thanks, Joe in Chicago.
<Welcome, Mich in the Poconos>
|
Curing LR and constant water
changes 11/3/07
I am refinishing a tank and will cure my live rock while I finish.
I have read your curing FAQs and posts. I will be curing 90-100 pounds in two
connected Rubbermaid containers with an ASM G2 skimmer, heater, and Ocean Runner
2500 to provide flow between tanks and charcoal in the tank. I will be holding
off on lighting for at least the first week.
I know I want some ammonia build up for the nitrifying bacteria to get going,
but I want to keep as much flora and fauna as possible and would like to plan
for an average schedule of water changes daily. In order to strike a good
balance what level of water change would you suggest daily for the first ten
days – two weeks? 25% per day? I have an extra tank for mixing, a 60 GPD ro/di
filter and extra pumps. I think I can get these water changes done in 15 minutes
per day.
If I do this will I be significantly extending the curing cycle?
<John, you will want to do enough water changes to keep the ammonia and nitrites
below 1 ppm . How much water and how often you will need to change it depends on
your rock and how much die off you are having. The idea is to keep these numbers
low enough to prevent things from dying that would otherwise be fine once in
your tank. I would also urge you to consider lighting the rock for this same
reason (some people do, some don’t, I do). Vigorous flow to keep things stirred
up and getting it to your skimmer will also help to control ammonia and
nitrites. Your rock will be seeing plenty of ammonia for the nitrifying bacteria
even with aggressive water changes. The time it will take depends again on your
rock, but with more water changes it should actually happen faster since you
will have less die off. >
Thanks,
John
<Happy reefing, Scott V.>
Re: Curing and constant water
changes 11/4/07
Thanks Scott. <Welcome John.>I am awaiting my new lights. Would a single
Corallife PC10000K 60 watt be OK? I know you prefer actinics.
<Actually I think it will be the perfect light and spectrum for your purposes
until you get your light. The actinics are only needed if you are using a bulb
deficient on the blue end, the 10k is not. Have fun with your newly refinished
tank and rock, Scott V.>
Re: Curing and
constant water changes – 11/17/07
Thanks Scott and all the rest of you.
<You are welcome John. I apologize for my slow response here, I have
been away for the last week. >
I started curing a week ago. I ordered it from Walt Smith through my LFS
and picked it up within a couple hours of arrival. I put it into the
tank
immediately (no cleaning except rinsing) and started it curing. I
followed your advice and put one Corallife 10000k 65W PC over the rocks
for about 4 hours per day.
<I would do 8-10 hours a day. >
Aside from an 80% water change on day 3 which I had to do because of a
leak <No fun! > in one of the Rubbermaid bins, I haven't done much
except skim. There is a pretty good skim going on. I have yet to see an
Ammonia spike. I am sure there was enough organic matter to start one.
My temp is 78, salinity 1.022, pH 8.25 and I am using RO/DI water.
<Sounds good.>
If my ammonia and Nitrite levels remain low, close to 0 , but nitrates
are up around 30 did I just miss the spike by making a water change?
<It is possible that the biological filtration in the rock has kept up
with your spikes. The ammonia and nitrites are there; they are just
getting processed into nitrates as fast as they are produced. The
skimming definitely helps. >
Should I toss a shrimp in the tank to try to ignite it?
<No, it sounds like everything is going fine. Like you said, there is
plenty of organic matter, it is just getting processed as expected. >
Incidentally with the high nitrates I am concerned about an algae
explosion even with the lights at 4 hours.
I would actually love it if the curing stayed low-level and left me with
some flora and fauna.
< Algae is always a possibility here, but nitrates are part of the game
here. I would just do a large water change after the rock is cured to
bring the nitrates back down to a reasonable level. With your ammonia
and nitrite levels staying down you should be able to preserve a lot of
the life on your rock. >
Thanks again,
John
<Good luck, Scott V.> |
Removing copper from a tank -- FAQ to
copper linked/suggested researching. 7/21/07
Hello Crew:
<Good Afternoon, Doug. Andrea here today.>
Thank you all the great information you provide! <Much obliged.> I have an
established 125 gallon FOWLR tank. All is well with it. <Fantastic!> I am
looking to add some more live rock to the tank and have a question. Can I cure
live rock in a tank that has ever had copper in it? <Read this, and the linked
articles at the top. Should answer all your questions:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/copperfa.htm> The tank was used about 6 months ago as
a quarantine tank for Ich. It has been dry and empty for 6 months. Is there a
product I can use to clean it that will guarantee to remove all traces of
copper? <Read the links above.> My LFS just got a shipment of beautiful LR that
is brimming with life. I would really hate to turn it into base rock while
curing it! Is it best for me to just go buy a 55 gallon tank that has never been
coppered?
<Read above. After that, it is your choice. You should have all the information
you need to make an informed decision. Best of luck!>
Doug M
LR curing large scale process??
7/16/07
<hello Robert>
I sell and build nano reef setups. A typical setup only uses 4 or 5 lbs of small
pieces, and maybe a half gallon of sand. I'm trying to look into the feasibility
of bringing in my own cured (or uncured) rock, cycling it and keeping it long
enough to get a good coralline growth on the rock, then use the rock in my
setups.
<This is something I have done before to help in the sales of Liverock>
I'm looking for known methods that work to cure and "grow out" rocks in
relatively small batches thru an assembly line sort of process to process about
40 to 50 lbs week. hopefully in no more than 2 tanks. The sand will (should) be
incorporated into the rock tanks to mature as well. Would have to use MH
lighting (no outdoor facilities to utilize ... yet)
<The 40-50lbs processing a week is not feasible to culture in just 2 tanks. When
the LFS I consulted did this project we used (10) 300gallon Rubbermaid tanks
that were plumbed to one another and were 46" off the ground. We then used (5)
300g Rubbermaid tanks for sumps. (2) rock tanks per sump. We plumbed all 5 sumps
in series also. We had the live sand in the sumps were detritus and critters
would settle out. This makes sand detritivore kits easy to harvest and breed.
The Liverock was placed in the 10 upper tubs and the calcium was maintained at
440ppm and the Alkalinity at 3.5meq/l. The lighting was 400w SE Metal Halide
lighting over each tub. It takes 30 days to get the rock to completely cure and
an additional 6 weeks to color up with corallines. Phosphates are the biggest
issue when doing this and they need to be extremely low. Use a large quantity of
phosphate resins and Activated Carbon. Then cycle only 2 tanks at a time for
Live rock harvest/replacement. This helps cure new rock faster because of the
established bacterial colonies. The mini cycle spikes after new rock was added
was only 48 hours long.
Another thing to do is take mushroom corals and chop them up and then toss them
into the tubs. They will colonize the liverock and give more life forms to the
rock. Star polyps are another thing to spread in the tubs as they grow quickly.
Feed the live rock phytoplankton daily so filter feeders breed/grow/spread. This
helps also. The initial setup requires about 400 square feet of space but will
pay off later.>
Do you know where there may be such a publication or help to get me a foundation
to build from? Thanks.
<Start researching here...
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/AqBizSubWebIndex/Biz%20Index/Biz%20index.htm>
<Rich aka Mr. Firemouth>
Old Rocks...New System – 07/03/07
Hi,
<Hello Philip, Mich here.>
I intend to start up a FOWLR tank.
<How nice!>
On the contrary, a friend of mine has decided to drop out, and he has 100 lbs or
so live rocks for my disposal.
<This is convenient!>
These rocks are however not in very good condition as I can see the corallines
are bleaching.
<That's ok, with improved tank conditions the coralline should bounce back.>
Are these rocks re-usable in my new tank?
<Certainly. Though adding a piece or two of new live rock would likely benefit
your system as well.>
What sort of treatment I need to take to cure them.
<The rock should be cured if your friend's tank is still up and running. So
there is likely nothing you will need to do. The coralline will likely improve
with frequent water changes.>
Regards
<Cheers! Mich>
Philip Chow
Cure and placement of live rock.
Fun With Live Rock... – 06/14/07
Hello and thanks in advance again.
<Happy to be of service! Scott F. with you tonight!>
I'm in the process of setting up a new saltwater tank and have been reading
much of your articles.
However, I'm still unsure on a good procedure for the adding of live rock
and sand.
<Okay..>
First, I wanted to cure the rock in the new display tank. I don't mind
waiting the few weeks for the cycle process.
I bought enough aragonite sand for about 4 inches. Should I cure the rock in
the tank on the bare bottom, without the sand, and once the rock cures, add
the sand, and reposition the cured rocks on top of the sand bed?
<Well, it's your call, really. The optimal procedure would be to cure the
live rock in a separate container, such as a plastic garbage can, and then
add the cured live rock to your aquarium. There is nothing fundamentally
wrong with curing the rock in your display aquarium, as long as you change
the water frequently, and provide adequate protein skimming. Of course,
under NO CIRCUMSTANCES will you add ANY animals to the aquarium until the
rock is fully cured and your ammonia and nitrite levels return to
undetectable levels!>
Or, should I put the sand in the tank, place the rock on the sand, and let
the cycle occur, and just clean the sand as needed during the process?
<That's also an acceptable approach, and provides the added benefit of
possibly seeding the sand with organisms that emerge from the rock during
the process.>
Or, should I spend extra and buy "fully cured rock" and place the aragonite
sand (around 4-5inches) and rock in the tank together?
<Once again, it's your call. Keep in mind that even "fully cured" live rock
will incur some die-off during the shipping/transport process, and you
should still monitor water chemistry carefully to confirm acceptable
environmental parameters before adding any animals.>
Also, the tank is 180G (72 inches long and 24 inches wide). If I want to
have around 135 lbs of live rock, and 100 lbs of dry base rock, can I cure
all the rock at one time, or should I stagger the rock curing into stages?
<If it were me, I'd try to add all of the rock at the same time. I like to
disturb the "hardscape" of the aquarium as little as possible once it's set
up, so I don't care for the piece-by-piece additions of rock, myself.
However, as long as the additional rock is fully cured when you add it to an
established system, there is little risk, IMO.>
Oh, another question about total tank water turnover. Does the total tank
water turnover include the filter gph, and the total powerheads gph
combined, or is water turnover only filtered water movement, and powerheads
only water movement?
Any ideas would be appreciated,
Thanks, Sol in New York City
<Good question, Sol. I am not personally aware of any standardized
definition of the term "turnover" in the hobby, although I am known by my
friends (you know who you are!) to overlook the obvious now and then! I
suspect that if you ask 10 different hobbyists, you'll get 10 different
answers! In my opinion, "turnover" is the total volume of water moved
through the system by pumps, powerheads, and filters. On the other hand,
there are those who define "turnover" as only the volume of water that flows
through the system sump in a given hour...It goes on and on! Hope this
helps! Regards, Scott F.> Live rock curing......where do I begin? & FO stkg. 4/23/07
What's up Crew,
I can't get enough of your site, if it wasn't for your site, I probably would
have cooked up some form of hydrochloric acid within my last reef set-up.
<Yikes!>
But on to bigger and better things: I am currently setting up a 135 gal
predator tank with a 50 gal sump with a 10 gal refugium, 1 Aqua-C remora pro
skimmer, vortex diatom filter,
<Not to be run continuously...>
5"DSB and total flow rate approx 1400 gph (future inhabitants will include
1-miniatus grouper, 1-bird wrasse, 1-porcipine puffer, 1- zebra moray eel, 1-
niger trigger).
<Mmm... all this won't fit here... see re these species "average" maximum
size...>
I know that it is pretty bland selection, but do you see anything wrong with
my choices?
<Mmm, mostly too much biomass or too little volume of system>
But what really is keeping me up at night (honestly) is my liverock
situation. I intend on acquiring about 85 lbs of dried Fiji liverock to seed
with about 30 pounds of uncured premium Fiji rock. I know that this will take
awhile (how long I am guessing 4-6 weeks), but obviously if I cant sleep at
night, time is something that I have a lot of. Is this too much rock for a
predator tank (not giving enough room for the inhabitants to roam), or should I
step it up to the minimum of 1lb per gallon?
<Isn't too much weight or volume here...>
Also can/should I run my Kalkwasser reactor while my tank is cycling or would
that be a waste of money and time?
<I would run it... to offset the large reductive situation of "curing",
die-off... and for practice...>
Please let me know, the sleeping pills that I am taking for my insomnia is
enabling me from driving to work (I WISH).
Thanks Again,
Chris
<Do rest well... but study re the fish list/species above... 135 gallons won't
accommodate these fishes... for long... even if they are all started very small.
Bob Fenner>
New 30 Gallon, Collecting Live Rock & Cure Cycle Gone Crazy 4/18/07
Hello Guys!
<Hoi, como 'sta?>
Jason here, greetings from the Philippines ... You guys and reading the site
has helped me tons designing and putting thought into my project.
<Ah, yes>
I’m currently setting up the plumbing, lights, etc for my 30 gallon tank. I
plan to start with FOWLR/refuge with DSB.
On April 7th, I had the opportunity to collect my own live rock, yes legally too
:) It was a couple hours drive, and I place the rock in a cooler with lots of
sea water. Should I have aerated the cooler with an airstone during the drive?
<Mmm... maybe... for this short a trip... likely okay w/o>
Anyway, back to the messy part. A couple days before the trip, I setup a
separate 30 gallon quarantine tank. By the time I collected the rock, the tank
had aged salt water for less than 24 hours (I think this was a big no-no). I
used the powerhead that came with the tank, and used a fan to keep the tank
around 81F. Salinity was 1.023
My acclimation was a bit harsh. I let the cooler sit for an hour, to allow the
water to reach a somewhat same temperature. Then I put a gallon of the sea
water in my own tank. Then I put a gallon of my tank water into the
cooler. After letting it sit for another 20 minutes, I put the live rock into
my tank.
I was weighing two bad situations .. put the live rock in a place where there is
better water flow but a harsher acclimation, or take a more gradual acclimation
process, but leave the rocks sit without any water flow. What should I have
done here?
<Mmm... this is likely fine as well... All depends really on the types and
amounts of "life" on/in the rock... Do know that a good deal of this material is
"knocked off" commercially... all large algae, sponges, ascidians... as most all
of this dies easily, pollutes... kills a good deal of the rest... And that
"standard practices" in cleaning (scrubbing, blasting with water, misting for
days... eliminates most all other biota, including undesirables... which you're
likely to have preserved.>
Everything was great in the quarantine tank .. for 24 hours. Then I noticed
worms dieing off in a corner.
<Ah, yes>
I sucked those up, and decided to do a 30 percent water change. More die-off
and 4 days later, doing 30 percent water changes a day, pretty much all of the
cool tube worms, and other hitch-hikers have died.
<Very common>
Disappointed, and the water was so cloudy and stinky, I stopped doing water
changes after 5 days. I just did top-offs to maintain salinity and let nature
take its course. I think my mistake here was I should have done water changes
immediately after I saw *any* ammonia increase .. and larger than 30%. What
would you have done?
<Mmm, the monitoring and water changes for sure... but also, likely would have
either picked rock with less life on it (under other rock) and/or placed all in
a much larger, better filtered, circulated system>
Now its April 18th, and pretty much everything is dead in my tank, but I'm sure
I have some great bacteria in my rock now :) It was very cloudy at some point,
but the cloudiness has been replaced by some fresh brown algae, yay.
<A "good" sign...>
How do I prevent such a huge die-off, so the next time I place my live rock in a
fresh quarantine tank, at least something survives? My guess is to 1) aerate
the cooler,
<Would help>
2) monitor every couple hours for ammonia
<Okay>
2) do 50% water changes at any ammonia increase 3) suck up any worms as they
die, 4) use aged salt water more than 24 hours old. Did I miss anything? What
is the correct procedure for maintaining life of a newly collected live rock in
a quarantine tank?
<First off... to be picky re the quality, quantity of rock selected... second,
to decide whether to initially "cure" in or out of water...>
My initial idea was that this rock would still be looking good at this
point. However, seeing that I have my algae bloom, should I still wait for 2
more weeks (or even longer) to let the cycle continue before bringing in a
cleanup crew of snails and hermit crabs?
A week from now, I will have my main tank complete.
Should I use some of this ugly-live rock as a base .. or should I start fresh
again?
<I'd do the former>
I will be doing more live rock collecting, but do not want to repeat the same
mistakes!
You guys take care!
Jason
<Please do read here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/liverock1.htm
and the linked files above. Bob Fenner>
LR Question, HI... curing, making... 4/12/07
I live in Hawaii and we are planning for a future big tank. In the mean time
we picked up a 12g Nano tank to practice water conditions. I put in 7lbs of
cured Molokai LR. We might put in some cleaner shrimp, snails, and maybe one
fish. To get ready for our big tank I want to store just LR in our open garage
for a few months or longer. I also want to convert dead rock to live so I was
thinking of using 20 gallon containers.
<Can be done>
Would a 200gph powerhead be enough flow?
<Yes... better by far with a sponge intake screen... to sponsor some mechanical
filtration>
Do I need to have some sort of filtration system?
<This is a very good idea, yes>
Can I put the cover on so debris doesn't go in? Should I put sand in there also
so I can just swap it to the new tank?
<I would do this in separate tanks/containers... easier to keep/clean>
Do I need lights for this long a period?
<Some folks say no... but at least some ambient light is recommended... Please
read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/lrcurefaqs.htm
and the linked files above... BTW, am wondering what the current law/s are re
collecting "coral skeletons" in HI (how much material in a given day... how high
above the high tide mark...). Please do relate to us your experiences here... as
am very interested myself. A hui hou! Bob Fenner, mauka of Kailua-Kona>
Curing Rock / Tank Cycle 3/30/07
Greetings again from the warm islands of the Philippines (maybe it’s the
pollution in Manila :)
<Greetings from the…cold, wet UK – (no explanation)>
I will be setting up a new 20 gallon tank/with 10 gallon refuge. I will also be
getting some uncured rock, cured rock, dead sand, and live sand. Should I cure
the uncured rock in a separate tank? If I had not really thought too much, I
would just stick all the rock (cured and uncured rock)...sand (dead and alive)
together in the tank, at the same time, and let everything cycle. However, after
thinking about it, if I put the sand together at the same time as the curing of
the rock, the sand might absorb too much ... should I put the sand in later? ..
I also thought I should put the cured rock a week or two after the un-cured rock
cures.
<Jason, you are right in thinking this through. One important factor will be the
depth of the sandbed you are intending to include. If you are using DSB for
de-nitrification etc then this will have the ability to store the excess
nutrients expelled from the curing live rock and this may, depending on the
amount of die-off, saturate the sand bed’s capabilities this early on. But with
a little maintenance this should be manageable. I would put the uncured rock in
first, leave it to cycle alone for a short while, combined with regular water
changes, maybe two weeks. Then add the other rock and the sands together and
these will not, comparatively, introduce many more nutrients. Then complete the
curing process as normal, maybe a little extended – 6/8 weeks
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/estbiofiltmar.htm >
I did check the FAQ!! :)
Jason
<Hope I’ve helped but you were on the right track through your reading so thank
you for researching first. Olly>
Re: Curing Rock / Tank Cycle 3/30/07
Hi Olly - I used to live in wet London for 2 years.
<Further north, in Nottingham - Robin Hood Land>
My response below:
> let everything cycle. However, after thinking about it, if I put the sand
together at the same time as the curing of the rock, the sand might absorb too
much ... should I put the sand in later? .. I also thought I should put the
cured rock a week or two after the un-cured rock cures.
> <Jason, you are right in thinking this through. One important factor will be
the depth of the sanded you are intending to include. If you are using DSB for
de-nitrification etc then this will have the ability to store the excess
nutrients expelled from the curing live rock and this may, depending on the
amount of die-off, saturate the sand bed’s capabilities this early on. But with
a little maintenance this should be manageable
I will be using an 8-10inch DSB. So if I put the rock and sand at the same
time, I'll saturate the capabilities, and this is a bad thing? Thus put the
rock in later? Just wanted to be sure.
<All I’m suggesting is that the bacteria that will be necessary to process the
die-off from the un-cured live rock will probably not be present in sufficient
quantities to handle all of the nutrients. The bacteria will catch up eventually
but this time in between may allow ammonia etc to accumulate in the system and
in the sand bed>
> maintenance this should be manageable. I would put > the uncured rock in
first, leave it to cycle alone > for a short while, combined with regular water
> changes, maybe two weeks. Then add the other rock So cure rock for the first
two weeks, with daily water changes? I thought it was suggested not to do any
water changes during a tank cycle?
<You are curing the live rock initially and it is important to do water changes
at this point, specifically if the ammonia level rise to around 1.0 and combine
it with aggressive skimming if possible. Essentially, you will be curing the
“un-cured rock” for the first few weeks, then the cycling will begin after that,
once that rock has enough beneficial bacteria to process what’s being produced –
equilibrium.
Thank you!
Jason
> and the sands together and these will not, comparatively, introduce many more
nutrients. Then complete the curing process as normal, maybe a little extended –
6/8 weeks
>
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/estbiofiltmar.htm
<Thanks again, Olly>
New rock old rock and cycling problem?? – 03/18/07
Hi guys.
<Rochelle>
I'm transitioning to a bigger tank. I set up a new 55g saltwater tank a week
ago. I added from my established 30g tank... 10 gal of water, some live sand
sprinkled on top of the new 40# of crushed coral, the rinsed carbon filter and a
live rock, in hopes of moving things along a little quicker. after day
4 things looked great! no ammonia, no nitrites and on 10ppm nitrates, assumably
due to the brown algae in the established tank from the water I
used. so I added a damsel. Things went well... he lived. my best friend owns a
pet store so I got the inside scoop on the new live rock coming in, I had
to have some!! it's gorgeous Fiji!
<Mmm... still... better to "cure" this elsewhere...>
so I picked out about 5 pounds after we rinsed it off and I brought it home and
picked off the dead plants and
sponges, that was day 5. now my ammonia level, on day 8, is going up currently
at 1.0 and my nitrites are 1.0
<Both toxic...>
and nitrates are 40 PH is good at 8 4. I know those parameters aren't horrible,
bit I have some fragile critters and I like near perfect water.
<Move either the "old" life or the new rock, stat.!>
I'm confused. my parameters in my other tank never increased or decreased no
mater how much I was poking around in there, never ammonia or nitrites. do I do
a water change if this keeps up? do I leave it alone? is it cycling again?
<It's toxified by dying life on the new LR...>
maybe I interrupted something by using stuff from my established tank? still
lots of dead stuff on the new rock?
<Yes>
eventually everything from my established tank will be going to the new one,
slowly of course to prevent shock.
<I wouldn't worry re this... move the new LR or "old stuff" now...>
I feel uncomfortable adding any more live rock from the established tank due to
the amount of baby sea stars living on them. and my brown starfish has split and
is somewhere regenerating he could be on the rocks. I guess my question is....
do I leave my 55g alone a let the live rock cycle and cure?
<I would NOT>
Do I do water changes to reduce the ammonia and nitrites? if I do a water change
will the ammonia and nitrites increase again?
<Source needs to be separated... PRONTO>
I have a yellow sea slug nudibranch thing, a 10" red sea star, 8-10 baby sea
stars, pencil urchin, pincushion urchin, the dumbest hermit crab on
earth, an emerald crab, 2 gobies, a brown star fish that his split into 3
pieces, and 4 damsels. they kinda need a bigger home. I don't want to kill
anything, I know this will be time consuming since my live rock has to
acclimated in cuz of the baby stars. I'm not sure what to do here. I want to
do things quickly but safely.
thanks for your help
Sheli
<Bob Fenner>
Post cycling pH jump – 03/15/07
Hi crew,
<George>
I've been reading your FAQs even before I started my setup, and can only say
thank you for all your efforts. I humbly admit while I have kept a simple
successful saltwater tank in my past for a few years, the one I am starting now
is beginning to humble me more so.
<One of the qualities I seek for myself in this involvement>
Brief overview: 75 gallon hex tank, 95 pounds partly cured live rock (from a
store my fellow reef nut has used for a decade) and 100 lbs live sand (Ocean
Direct by Carib sea), sump (which I've used until my 24x12x17 refugium came in).
Allowed it to cycle in tank and measured pH, refractive index kept at 1.23-1.24,
amm, nitrite, and nitrate daily. All went smoothly all along, not too much
debris. Used deionized tap water (large cartridge type system. no $ yet for an
RO sys). 2 weeks ago, all readings finally rested at 0, pH steady at 8.2-8.4,
sp. grav at 1.024.even nitrates, and almost simultaneously I began to see the
beginnings of the diatom bloom. Waited 5 more days to make sure readings stayed
low, an then ordered cleanup crew. consisting of 10 Nassarius, 10 Ceriths, 5
Turbos, some micro stars and mini brittles (about 120 total), a bottle of live
copepods and 2 scarlet cleaner shrimp as well as some rhodophyte and coin
Caulerpa; 2-3 cups Chaetomorpha in the fuge (Inland Aquatics, and Live Aquaria
source). At the same time I began setting up a small acclimation/QT tank
figuring by time that was done cycling I could start looking for fish. Again,
every single day I measured everything. and all parameters were in line. The
only negative seemed to be the diatoms starting to take off.
<Not necessarily harmful>
On the day all the inverts arrived, suddenly -i.e., within a 1 day period. the
pH had jumped to 8.8. I tested 3 times to be sure, tested the water I was using
to make up the salt mix (which by the way is Reef Crystals by Kent).
Immediately instituted a 30% water change, then began acclimation over 3-4 hrs
(used very very slow addition of 10% bag volume every 15 min or so).
All is still alive, but I can't stop the climbing pH. I've been employing a
stop gap measure of water changes and using pH down to slowly adjust (it's
sulfuric acid, not phosphate based). All the while Amm, Nitrite, Nitrate remain
zero. Any suggestions or clues or remedies? 100% water change?
<I would not fool with the pH here... I suspect this is an effect, perhaps
artifactual of the algae (Chaetomorpha) addition... At any length, the pH will
drift down of its own accord... with time, reductive events in the system. Don't
panic! Bob Fenner>
Your advice is greatly appreciated !
Re: Post cycling pH jump 3/15/07
Cheers Bob. I agree...I don't like altering acid-base chemistry by
additives except on occasion, and this was one. The pH bounce back suggested
something more.
<Yes>
I've now noted the pH is the AM after a few hrs in the darkness is ~8.2...and
after lights on a few hrs it presumably is climbing.
<Bingo>
Figured I should also do some testing of with/without aeration to see the
dynamics there. Seaclone skimmer has been running about 1 week also, producing
a fair but not great yield of skimmate (yes...this will be replaced by a more
efficient skimmer someday...maybe soon); thinking of adding airstone in sump
section to test buffering and gas exchange (indirectly). So I'll be wary of the
O2/CO2 issue and carbonate/bicarb chemistry going on...without use of additives,
I think I may be able to find a better balance.
<Time will tell>
Keep up the awesome & noble work. You're reaching a wider audience than any
classroom or publication could reach here!
George
<Ahh, the Net... what will come next? Something like "Star Trek"... and then?
BobF>
Low ph during cycling, yep. 3/8/07
Hey guys and girls,
I am helping my uncle set up his tank. He started his cycle last Saturday. He
called me today and said his tanks PH is 7.4. Here is his setup:
75 gallon w/ a 3 inch sandbed
55 gallon refugium w/ a 6 inch sandbed
50 lbs. of Kaelini live rock that he is cycling his tank with
Ammonia .5
Nitrite 0
Nitrate 0
Great water movement
After some readings, I recommended to him not to run his lights during his
cycle. Could this be why his PH is so low?
<Mmm, only part of the equation. "Is" mostly the reductive effects of the
"die-off" of parts of the LR biota>
Also are there any solutions like baking soda to raise his PH to normal?
Thanks,
Greg
<All sorts... Please read (see the indices, use the search tool) on WWM re LR
Curing, Alkalinity... Bob Fenner>
Live Rock/Curing 3/5/07
I've been pouring over the FAQ's and I'm so confused! I started up a 55
gallon 5 months ago w/out <No abbreviations, please.> LR and all the LFS told me
<was> I should have put the LR in when I started in order for it to cycle with
the tank.
<Yes, if uncured.>
If I put it <in> now, my tank would recycle and it would be problematic,
<with animal life present, yes.>
unless I cured it separately, and I don't have the room for that. I have since,
in essence, started over due to persistent ich. I changed out the substrate
(siphoning out the dust), did a 50% water change (total of 75%) and dropped the
salinity to 1.009 for a week (fish are in a QT, inverts in a Rubbermaid, husband
getting annoyed).
<Hee, hee, usually the other way around, wife getting annoyed.>
Then I raised the salinity to 1.024 and bought 70lbs of Fiji premium to cure in
the tank. Now I'm reading in the LR FAQ's not to do that. HELP! Am I killing the
rock?
<Mmm, nothing wrong with curing the live rock in the display tank as long as
there is no animal life present. Not the best way to go if your livestock has
to be in smaller quarters during the curing. Weekly water changes will be
required, and siphon off any dead matter in the process. I like using a turkey
baster during this time to blow debris, dead matter off the rock where it can be
siphoned off the bottom. This could take three to four weeks depending on when
the ammonia level returns to zero. Generally, during the process, the ammonia
reading is off the charts. Use of a protein skimmer will help much during the
curing process in
removing dissolved organic matter.>
I'm 4 days into curing, the rock is turning white, from what I'm reading that is
normal.
<Yes, die off is occurring and in due time most animal life that was present on
the rock, should return.>
I've also read two schools of thought, to change water or not...what are your
thoughts?
<I'd follow our advice on curing live rock, do search/read.>
If so, how much and when? I've already done one water change. Should I put some
Biro Spira in to aid in cycling?
<Not necessary, but after a couple weeks I would use carbon filtration to aid in
water purification. Any sooner than this would be a waste, as the carbon's
effectiveness wouldn't last a day.>
Thank you for your guidance and experience! Jennifer
<You're welcome. James (Salty Dog)>
Re: Live Rock/Curing 3/6/07
Wow. Salty Dog. I feel honored. you're a legend!
<Oh no, you've got me confused with Mr. Fenner.>
OK, I'm feeling better now! Whew. thank you!
<You're welcome.>
Yes, my ammonia is way off the charts and so are the nitrites.
<Will be.>
I'm concerned about the critters in the live rock but I've read in the FAQ's
that whatever is deep in the rock will be ok.
<Most will. I've got some select Lalo Rock I've had for over a year, and
critters are still popping out from time to time.>
I couldn't find an article on a step by step curing of Live Rock so I've been
trying to gather from all the LR curing FAQs.
<Have you read here and related links below the article? http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_2/cav2i3/Live_Rock/live_rock.htm>
You stated using a turkey baster (better not use that one at
Thanksgiving...again, husband might get ticked)
<A little fish flavoring to the turkey may not be that bad.>
to clean off dead matter so does that mean you don't brush it off (I've read
that in FAQs).. to me that would be kinder and gentler to the rock and fauna.
<Very much so.>
Also, lights on or off?
<Definitely lights out for the entire curing process or nuisance algae will
proliferate, and we certainly do not want that, do we.>
Thank you so much! Jennifer
<You're welcome Jennifer, and thank you for your kind words. James (Salty Dog)>
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