Luvthekeys
Member
Yesterday afternoon I noticed what appeared to be a snowstorm of tiny white particles. I first thought it was a bacterial bloom which happens frequently in newly cycled tanks. However instead of the water appearing cloudy it looked as if the white particles were following the flow of the pumps and powerheads. I did some reading and thought it might be calcium participating out of the water column. I tried to take a photo but the white spots were too small to show up on the photo only pods could be seen. The tank is a 28 gallon Nano with 89 watts of LED lighting.
This morning I went through all my tests which i list following
Ammonia was 0
Nitrites were 0
Nitrates was 20 ppm or close to that number eyes not what they used to be
PH was 8.0
Salinity was 1.026
Phosphate was less then .025
Calcium 380
Carbonate Hardness was 9KH
Magnesium was 870 (this seems very low. I can not believe it could go that low in a new tank but I am new to saltwater. I was using a Seifert test kit and found it convoluted to use. I admit to skipping Chemistry in high school.)
I am too new to start chasing reading by adding one chemical after another. I should say all the invertebrates including several peppermint shrimp on the rather large cleaning crew seem to be doing well, lots of filter feeders appearing on live rock and many pods in the water . So my questions are:
Does anyone agree that it appears to be Calcium participating out of the water column? (based on the low Magnesium level)
I should add I had an airstone in the one of the back compartments to add oxygen before this happened since I thought it would help add oxygen to the water. I have turned it off to see it that makes a difference.
Could it actually be a Bacterial bloom?
Am I missing something else it might be?
Most important am I overreacting?
Since I do not want to start adding stuff and possibly making the problem worse I plan to do a ten to twenty percent water change daily until I remove the total amount of water in the tank, Is this a valid option to get the magnesium up to proper levels. I will test the new water to see what Magnesium level I get before I put it in the tank.
I hope some of you can shed light on what I might be experiencing.
This morning I went through all my tests which i list following
Ammonia was 0
Nitrites were 0
Nitrates was 20 ppm or close to that number eyes not what they used to be
PH was 8.0
Salinity was 1.026
Phosphate was less then .025
Calcium 380
Carbonate Hardness was 9KH
Magnesium was 870 (this seems very low. I can not believe it could go that low in a new tank but I am new to saltwater. I was using a Seifert test kit and found it convoluted to use. I admit to skipping Chemistry in high school.)
I am too new to start chasing reading by adding one chemical after another. I should say all the invertebrates including several peppermint shrimp on the rather large cleaning crew seem to be doing well, lots of filter feeders appearing on live rock and many pods in the water . So my questions are:
Does anyone agree that it appears to be Calcium participating out of the water column? (based on the low Magnesium level)
I should add I had an airstone in the one of the back compartments to add oxygen before this happened since I thought it would help add oxygen to the water. I have turned it off to see it that makes a difference.
Could it actually be a Bacterial bloom?
Am I missing something else it might be?
Most important am I overreacting?
Since I do not want to start adding stuff and possibly making the problem worse I plan to do a ten to twenty percent water change daily until I remove the total amount of water in the tank, Is this a valid option to get the magnesium up to proper levels. I will test the new water to see what Magnesium level I get before I put it in the tank.
I hope some of you can shed light on what I might be experiencing.