Hi
@flower I contacted Seachem regarding turning skimmer off during feeding. Their answer was that the skimmer will only ever skim what hasn't been consumed by corals which is a good thing. The dosage recommended takes into account the small amount that will be extracted by the skimmer before coral consumption. It would seem to me left over nutrients would be a lot worse in a mixed reef tank. So I don't believe a reef tank can be over skimmed at all. I need to keep nitrates below. 0.02. & phos below 0.03 for happy mixed reef tank. I honestly think I would struggle with those numbers without skimmer running 24/7. Can I ask what size reef tank you run , stocking of fish, what type of corals & numbers you run it at. ? It seems you are very successful , I would Love to learn your secrets !
P,S. A pic would be great too. Thanks.
It takes filter feeding corals a full day to feed. it's indeed true the skimmer will only remove what the corals don't consume...
but you have to give the poor slow feeding corals time to do that. Most folks who run a skimmer 24/7 and only feed once a week, won't have fast growth on their corals, as long as they have the light needed and whatever little bit of food, they will live...but if you want a nice colony, try turning off the skimmer for the day. For a single day there is no chance to pollute your tank, so you wouldn't have to deal with PO4 and NO3 being out of control, you wouldn't have any change at all from what you are seeing now, except increased coral growth.
Coraline is just a crusty algae, all you need to have it do well is a little light, and Calcium within 450 to 500 range, the amount of ammonia, nitrates, nitrites or phosphates won't bother it at all....
I had a 90g and 30g long mixed reef. I crashed my computer and lost the pictures of my reef (there might be something in SWF.com but I wouldn't know where to begin a search), now all I keep are seahorses. I lost the reef when my heater broke and electrocuted it. I lost about $1500.00 in coral. I priced it at that amount when I wanted to replace what I lost,
in the size I had when they were killed. I could have restocked it with frags, but I just didn't have the heart to watch the tiny stuff take years to develop. I did not however keep SPS coral. I loved mushrooms, and I was told the two types could not get along in the same tank, so I never tried my hand with them. My favorites were the fox coral and xenia.
Every tank is different, the secret of success is to stay on top of things, water changes and testing... and tweak the tank as it develops. I even added a nano power head just to keep my chili coral happy with enough flow. I also lost corals that just didn't do well for me, such Pagoda cup and clover corals. I killed one coral off because I just didn't know better, a beautiful huge yellow brain coral I dipped, nobody said not to dip them, and back then I dipped everything, it's been 10 years at least, and I still feel bummed about that.