Sand or crushed coral?

billy2k1

Member
I'm setting up a 30g tank and i'm not sure wich way to go.Reading other threads some guys recomend crushed coral and reading another one the guys said the opposite.I'm planning on putting toguether a fish only tank,artificial corals and artifiacial rocks.Should i use c.coral or sand?,how about cleaning crew on artificial stuff,is it possible?. :notsure:
 

richie1742

Member
go with sand, ive read lots about how sand is better over CC. and i think looks a lot better or natural looking.
-good luck!
 

littleliza

Member
won't crushed coral give you more nutrients i.e. calcium leaching into the water? Maybe it depends on what kind of sand you use. I think you have to regulate depth of the sand bed depending on what kind you use, too. What kinds of fish do you plan on having? If you are going to have any that burrow you'll want something that won't injure them but can be deep enough for them to tunnel.
 

1journeyman

Active Member
Originally Posted by Littleliza
won't crushed coral give you more nutrients i.e. calcium leaching into the water? Maybe it depends on what kind of sand you use. I think you have to regulate depth of the sand bed depending on what kind you use, too. What kinds of fish do you plan on having? If you are going to have any that burrow you'll want something that won't injure them but can be deep enough for them to tunnel.
No. Sand has more surface area/volume.
Yes, use Aragonite sand.
You do have to regulate depth of sand. <2" or >4" (for a deep sand bed)
CC can be done, but you have to keep it clean to prevent nutrients from building up. a Live sand bed takes care of that for you.
 

computrgk

Member
you'll get about a dozen more of these but DO NOT USE CC it will just increase cleaning time and nitrate levels VERY VERY BAD STUFF IMO
 
T

thomas712

Guest
Its simple....takes deep breath...
Most of us will not use crushed coral because it is a large substrate that traps the fish waste and uneaten food that has to be vacuumed before it creates nitrates, which it will anyway. Crushed coral does not provide a very good biological zone, and many tanks are setup with CC from the get go through lack of knowledge or because it is the only substrate that an LFS sells and tells you that it is all you need, using a selling point of CC has buffering power. I have personally battled nitrates over 100 ppm during my days of CC and UGF doing frequent large water changes. So many of us have been there and had high nitrates, did a water change to lower them and they were back in a couple of days. CC has sharp edges, which is undesirable for inverts, like anemones walking around, pods or worms. No getting around it CC is high maintenance and can lead to poor water quality, frequent maintenance, sick livestock, algae blooms and more.
Sand on the other hand has more benefits. These include having far more surface area thereby making it able to handle a higher bio load of bacteria. It is less dangerous to your infauna and has a more natural look in the tank. If going with a DSB Deep Sand Bed you can have other benefits as well like finishing the denitrification or providing sand sifting, burrowing, or tunneling fish and critters a place to play. The denitrification process predominantly occurs in deeper substrates and in areas of stagnant flow where oxygen levels are depressed. And this is why deep sand beds are effective as a nitrogen export mechanism. As water slowly diffuses deeper, aerobic organisms strip all available oxygen for respiration. In the deep, oxygen-deprived layers, denitrifying anaerobes are given the opportunity to convert nitrogen compounds into nitrogenous gases, which escape via tiny bubble out of the aquarium. I believe this process can also work on a limited basis in shallow sand beds. My sand bed is no more than 2 inches deep in some spots.
 

billy2k1

Member
Ok,it's clear now that sand is the way to go,now no body mention anything about live rock,are the really important or can i go with artificial decoration?.I have a wet/dry filter rated for 75 g with protein skimmer running in a 30 gallon tank.I'm not planning on any invertebrates for now.Should i still use live rock?
 

1journeyman

Active Member
Depends...
type of live rock?
Cured or uncured?
You can get some good deals on live rock on the internet, provided you are prepared to cure it. (Well, good deal from the perspective of paying 3-5 $ for rocks... what a hobby we have)
Live rock provides tiny to microscopic life to your tank that you won't get without it. It also provides for much more surface area for bacteria to grow on. Plus, many of your fish will find their habitat much more comfortable with live rock.
Live rock is the way to go.
 

billy2k1

Member
ok,lets talk about cured and uncured,whats the difference?.Maybe something like getting it ready for the tank.I'm cicling my 30 gallons tank now.Is this a good time to do that?
 
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