Day/Night Temp. Swing...

fishforme

Member
What is the max allowable temperature swing in a healthy Reef Tank. I've heard 2 degrees is OK... has anyone had success with 3 or 4 degrees?
I just installed a new pump and the temperature spiked w/lights to 85 degrees, I put a small computer fan in the stand facing the new external pump and overnight, the temperature dropped to 78 degrees. I am a bit unsure as to what will happen today when the lights and the ballasts (2X 250W Metal Halide 5" above water) turn on... I'm assuming the temperature will rise a few degrees...
 

cyn

Member
Great question! I am looking forward to a reply here. I wish I had the answer, but this will boost the ? back up.
cyn
 

nm reef

Active Member
My reef has ranged from 78 in the am to around 82 in mid afternoon and has been in this range for several months.....for the most part I believe that any range from a low of 76 to a high of 84 would be ok........but any sudden changes or prolonged extreme lows or highs could be bad.....from personal experience I've seen temps over 86 cause death to a few corals and I've never had problems with extreme lows....but I feel that any stable range within 76-84 would be normal.............
 

hondo

Member
good question. I would like to hear from some sharks on this one as this is a major concern to me as well. I was so worried about the temp swing I now keep my reef at 82 to avoid the nighttime 78 and daytime 84 temp swing as this kind of shift would not occur in nature and I assumed it would stress fish and corals.
 

nm reef

Active Member
Hondo.....correct me if I'm wrong but did you say "temp swings of 78-84 do not occur in nature".....I'm by far no expert but I would think that in a natural setting any reef any where in the world would experience some kind of temp swings.........wheather/time of day/currents.....seems to me all these would effect temp...........heck makes sense to me that early in the am would naturally be slightly cooler than say high noon...........
 

ky

Member
If anyone can do this, I highly recommend it. When we had our house built, I had rooms bulit in the basement that were directly under my tanks. My sumps are in the basement directly beneath the tanks. Since that part of the basement is always 65 degrees, my tank never changes temperature. During the day, the lights heat up the top of the water (which is what goes down the overflow) and it is cooled down in the basement. I have a heater in the sumps to keep the night time temps constant. My water temp is always 81 degrees. If your wife will let you, drill a hole in the floor up throught the bottom of the stand. It's not like you will ever move the tank so the hole will never be seen. The only one that has to worry about it is the person that you sell the house to :)
 
When we were setting our tank up we were having temp swing problems and everyone we talked to said that 4 degrees were fine as long as it didn't go into the upper 80's. We finally got everything settled and our temp is stable at 78 day and night.
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broomer5

Active Member
Great question indeed - I don't know if I have the cure all solution you all are wanting but I'll tell ya what I can.
It's true that the water temperatures near coral reefs does fluctuate more than you might expect. As mentioned, surface to depth temperature gradiants exist for sure, as do seasonal, and day to night swings. Tides and currents will also bring in cooler or warmer water.
The thing to remember though is that most all of these "natural" temperature shifts occur gradually - not normally very fast at all.
Obviously to us all is the water nearer the surface will heat up from the sunlight. The closer the reef is to the equator will affect this rate as well - how much - I have no idea.
Most everything I've read states that you find the most mixed species of corals in waters between 70-78 F. Areas of the ocean that are normally below 60 F or above 85 F - few corals are found.
So ..... still haven't answered the question.
As stated - as long as your temperature swings are gradual increases and decreases - I don't believe you'll have any major problems.
Lighting, pumps, powerheads, amount of live rock/substrate, evaporation rate at the water surface, w or w/o sump, all play a part in either cooling or heating the tank.
An empty glass box of water, no rock, no sand, nothing but lighting, some circulation, a heater and water will swing faster from day to night, compared to a tank loaded to the hilt with live rock, 4-6 inch DSB, fish, inverts, etc. There's more mass there to hold the heat in once it get's to a given temperature.
My 75 has two heaters in the sump - and so far it is holding steady at about 78F. Summer poses more trouble keeping it cool.
Anyways ... a steady temp is ideal.
2-3 degree swings are good - you're fine.
4-6 degrees is not uncommon - but watch your fish and corals close.
10 degree swings are not recommended at all, and you would be wise to explore the reasons and try to correct.
 
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