Quote:
Originally Posted by
dannywwhite http:///t/395985/new-to-saltwater-need-help#post_3527124
Hi there! So basically I will just tell you the background of what i have. I have 2 freshwater tanks, one 38 and one 10 and recently I started my saltwater. After letting it sit for a long amount of time with live rocks, sand, and such, I added biospire and went away for a week on vacation. When I got home I checked the levels, which all turned up absolutely spotless, so I added fish. They are doing great (this is day 2 of having the fish), and everything seems to be going well. My question is, when can I introduce coral? I realize after my ammonia is broken down and there are no traces of nitrite and nitrate, which will obviously take some time. But I want to know if I can just immediately add coral after the cycle is back to normal, or wait longer? I'm not exactly sure. I have at the moment 1 LED light, and today I am picking up more LED's for the coral later on. The 1 was just to have for right now, to adjust the fish to night and day I guess. I would LOVE advice from people, please help as I am only a major rookie with saltwater!!
Thank you!!
Hi there and Welcome!!!
Congrats on your first SW tank!!
Coral really don't have that heavy of an impact on the bio-load of the tank (as long as you are not feeding them). So they can be added after the initial cycle. But... It is recommended that you have some stable parameters for the basic's: ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, and ph. As long as you make sure the initial cycle is complete and holding you can add corals.
Now your light... What brand is it and what are the specs??? There are a lot of different LED units on the market and some are wonderful and some are not that good at growing coral (more specifically, some are fish only lights and cannot support coral growth). The 3 watt diodes fixtures are the ones that can really grown coral, and some of the 1 watt diode fixtures can grow some coral (mushrooms, zoa's, polyps, and other low light corals), but fall short on meeting the needs of light hungry corals and anemones (SPS, and anemones).
I have even seen some micro LED's that are like .25 watts per diode that barley even light the tank for viewing.
We need to see what light fixture you have (and what you are planning on getting new) to see if it can support growing corals.
Hope that helps!!