While mature live rock coupled with live sand can keep Nitrate quite low in smaller tanks with very few fishes, there are methods of eliminating it all together. ... Why will life rock only remove nitrates in small tanks. A salifert test kit will test down to 0.2ppm!!!. A normal 2 inch sand bed will remove nitrates, along with good skimming. ...
Why does live rock have to be cured? How to cure live rock? Step 1 - Prepare a setup to cure live rock. Step 2 - Prepare live rock before curing. Step 3 - The curing process. Step 4 - Ensure the rock is …
Dec 23, 2004. #3. The rock should last for a very long time, thouogh it will absorb alot of the nutrients and detrius that we don't want in our tanks. So I suggest blasting the rock with a PH or a turkey baster when you do your maintainance. This will make the LR more efficient, and last longer.
If you are using flake food, it may be time to stop. You could also add some chaeto to your sump to help reduce these.) After you address the phosphate/nitrate issue, I would pluck the algae by hand. Try to get as much of it as you can. Then reduce the length of your lighting cycle for a few weeks.
The trick is to remove a thin layer of rock with the coral. Live rock breaks apart easily and scraping a small amount of the surface off the rock won't hurt anything. This also helps with gluing the pieces back down. They are already attached to a thin layer of rock so you can just superglue them anywhere.
Take half the rock and move it to the new tank leaving half behind to be moved with the livestock. Get a SeaChem ammonia alert badge and monitor it multiple times per day. Keep Prime on hand in case …
Inspect all your pieces of live rock, inspecting for pests, nuisance algae, or dead organisms. Black patches are usually a dead animal. Scrub the dead pieces and remove any pest you can find. Rinse in clean RO/DI water. Place each rock in the container/bin. Fill with clean, freshly mixed saltwater at 1.025 SG.
Your final option is to treat live rock and corals with dechlorinated freshwater. Simply dip the affected rock or coral right in and it will get rid of a Bristle Worm. Fun Facts. 1. Some Bristle Worms Can Kill …
Hold your nose up near the rock and smell it. If it smells like the ocean or a jetty at low tide your good to go, if it smells strongly like rotten fish it will need to be cured. The more scientific approach is to place your new live …
Use thick glue or epoxy putty to attach corals to live rock. First quarantine and dip the corals to prepare them for the tank. Cut off the base of the frag plug if necessary. Acclimate the corals to allow them to adjust to the new water parameters. There's more to putting corals on rocks than just this brief answer.
Light green to tan; pentagonal disc with thin dark reticulated lines; long arms with dark banding. Inhabits sand and reefs, often only extending arms from within live rock to feed. Very beneficial for marine aquariums, they help to remove detritus and uneaten food from aquarium. Reef tank safe. A very gentle species.
You just need to make sure you are around when it decides to do it, or it could end up chopped. Or, if you don't have anything on the rock, and it's easy for you to take the rock out of the tank, place the rock above theta k with the anemone hanging upside down and eventually it will drop. Good luck. Mar 14, 2018. #3.
Cut off the plug on the bottom side of your coral and use epoxy putty and put it over the rock in the shape that will fit the rock ( our pick: Gorilla All Purpose Epoxy Putty) Then place the coral into the putty in the same place and your work is done. On the other hand, you can also use super glue gel to attach them.
0 0 0. Tennyson said: If you cut the base of the coral they will recover within a few weeks. It is riskier to cut the coral, and you will still have a 'stump' on the rock, but soft corals are very forgiving with being fragged. I would recommend dipping in iodine + tank water solution after cutting, to prevent infection.
Removing the rock and letting the Sun take care of the issue would be the best solution. Just leave it away from a neighbours windows and in a high wind flow area and you should be good. Do not boil, pressure wash, etc. Just set it out in a tub and let Mother Nature take over.
Smelling the rock. Hold your nose up close to the rock and smell it. If you notice a strong odor like that of rotten fish, then you need to cure your rocks. If the smell is like that of the ocean, then it's ready for use. Test for …
Remove all the debris from the rock before placing it in your curing container. You can use simple tools, like an old toothbrush, to scrub off …
I've got about 200 small-med size mushrooms that have started to take over my tank. I've tried using a razor blade and it just takes forever. I've cleaned off one rock by pulling it out of the tank which was the way to go, but many of the others are not removable. Also, while cutting some of them off, they excrete goop which i'm guessing isn't ...
Leave your lights off as much as possible to minimize the algae. A little anyway during the cycle. When you are testing and you notice the ammonia and nitrites on the down slide, about 3-4 weeks into the cycle, then put in your cleaning crew or a little sooner if you see the gha getting out of hand.
What is curing? Why cure live rock? What is the difference between pre-cured and un-cured live rock? Will curing decrease biological diversity on the live rock? What happens if you do not cure live rock properly? How …
I received live rock from a local person a few months back. Then I noticed my fish got some type of bacterial infection and removed them and started treating them for copper. I was planning on adding them back after the 4-6 week period and I noticed my coral not looking too good. Every 4 days...
Sk8r. Staff member. RC Mod. Mar 12, 2017. #4. Remove each rock, scrub with stiff toothbrush, dip each affected area in hydrogen peroxide for 30 seconds, rinse in discard tank water, then replace. I'd do this little at a time, one rock at a go, and be careful the bubbles that come off the rock do not hit another coral.
Ultimate Guide to Live Rock Hitchhikers. This guide aims to share some of the good, interesting (or neutral), and bad live rock hitchhikers that commonly stow …
Live rock will have spawn of corals inverts and algae on the rock. It will take a little time for these "pest" to mature and get to the size that you will see them. You need to turn the rocks and blow off any dead items once a week checking the rock for any signs of "pest's" use a small powerhead to blow off the rock.
Is it possible to remove live rocks from my tank, put in a RO DI water basket, srub it and thread it with peroxide there and then put it back into my tank? Guy of …
They are most commonly dealt with by a Harlequin shrimp, who will hunt for the stars. On its own, the harlequin shrimp is a stunning invertebrate, however its diet is so specific the only way that you can …
Eventually it should be all covered with coralline algae. For me it took over a year for coral algae to start showing up. On one of my tanks I did use bleached rock and doses this: Coralline Algae in a Bottle + Nitrifying Bacteria for Saltwater Aquariums, Pink Fusion Strain . Not sure if this helped at all or if it was the time but 4 months ...
Live rock will typically have a purple coloration, which is seen on the vast majority. This purple coloring is actually coralline algae. Coralline algae are awesome in color and are also very beneficial, reducing nutrients that pest algae utilize to would grow and thrive. Purchasing live rock is recommended to begin your aquarium's ...
If you use vinegar and ro its going to kill anything on the rocks. I would put it back in with new water and let it go! Using vinegar is just like Muriatic Acid, but much weaker. It bubbled some of the crap out of the rock, but doesn't eat it away as fast.
Z Rex said: Bingo. Phosphates will latch on to the rock and sediment until the rate of adsorption equals the rate of release, then it will be in equilibrium, with some phosphates leaving the rock but phosphate in the water binding to the now empty sites. If you put a rock that was in a high phosphate tank into a tank with low phosphates then it ...