Canreef Aquatics Bulletin Board

Canreef Aquatics Bulletin Board (http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/index.php)
-   Reef (http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/forumdisplay.php?f=8)
-   -   Help, please (http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=53492)

animallover 06-10-2009 04:09 AM

Help, please
 
Hi!
I have seahorses, coral, feather dusters, xenia, clove polyps, mandarin gobie, and an emerald crab. What should be my proper KH ppm? I'm not sure if my range should be in the 6-11 degree(100-200 ppm) or 11-22 degree (200-400 ppm)? I keep showing between 13-16 drops - is this ok? Also, I'm unsure --should my alkalinity be 6 meq/L or more or less? The following readings I took tonight:
Alkalinity 7 meq/L
PH 8.3
Ammonia 0 ppm
Nitrite 0 ppm
Calcium 440 ppm
KH 13 drops or degrees (232.7 ppm)
Salinity 1.025
****Nitrate 30 ppm *****
How can my nitrates be this high if all my other levels are ok? Any input, anyone?
I appreciate any response. I have only been doing this since last October--any other advice on what I have and need to do is very much appreciated.
It is all about my seahorse for me, so if I have to adjust anything, it will be in the best interest of my seahorses

findingnemo1 06-10-2009 04:20 AM

Hi there

Alkalinity and Kh are one in the same.

It should be anywhere between 7 and 11 maximum.
Mine is at 8.
What test kits are you using?
Do you dose for the calcium and dkh? And if so what are you dosing...

Nitrates are an issue in tanks. Not enough water changes,clean up crew,overfeeding.
Do you have a sump? If a filter do you clean it regularily?
Any sponges that collect gunk.

animallover 06-11-2009 05:24 AM

Thanks for your input
 
Hi!
Thank you for replying. Here is my list to answer your ?'s.
I do at least twice per week:
KH test by Aquarium Pharmaceuticals
Calcium by same brand as above
Marine pH & Alkalinity by Seachem
High range pH by API
Ammonia by API
Nitrite by API
Nitrate by API
Also use the Mardel saltwater test strips once per day. I do my water changes once per week (I have a 55 gallon tank, and I change 10 gallons every change). With every water change I add 25 drops of Aragamilk for my calcium and buffer. I also add 1/2 capful of Nutrafin pH stabilizer and KH booster. When my pH gets lower I add Seachem Marine buffer to maintain pH to 8.3. I have seven seahorses and I feed them twice a day at about ten mysis shrimp per horse. Maybe I could be over-feeding, cuz sometimes there is shrimp left on the sand, but I really try to keep up on syphoning it out with my turkey baster. My cleanup crew consists of about five good sized hermit crabs, one emerald crab, lots of bristle worms in my rock, four turbo snails-one huge one and three smaller ones- and I also have the gobie, does she count as cleanup? Yes I have a sump and my tank is not drilled. I have the four tray set up and was told to only change one level at a time, once per 4-6 weeks. I'm at about 6 - 8 weeks when I change these. So what say you?
Thanks in advance!! :)

mark 06-11-2009 05:44 AM

Natural Seawater always a good target. This link for NSW also has the range for different scales of alkalinity (meq/l, ppm, dKH).

PoonTang 06-11-2009 05:54 AM

you could try increasing the sizes or frequency of your water changes and cutting back on the dosing. Your Alk (KH) is quite high and your Cal is quite high depending on your corals. If your coral load is quite small you may not need to supliment at all. Most people dont worry too much about thier pH and dont tend to try to change it too much. The tank will usually find its own happy medium. It appears that you may be over feeding a little if there is that much left over food and it appears you are running some kind of mechanical filter and no skimmer? thus would be the source of your nitrates. 4-6 weeks is way too long to leave a mechanical filter running without changing it.

edikpok 06-11-2009 06:55 AM

Since you have a sump - you can put some macro algae in there that will consume nitrates and release nitrogen. I am sure that someone else will tell you the exact types as I am not too familiar with them...

In case you use sponges in your filtration water, make sure that you rinse them in aquarium water that you take out of your tank when you do the water changes... This will decrease the amount of waste in your tank and will lower your nitrates

fishytime 06-11-2009 03:36 PM

Describe please for us what is in these trays....most setups these days have little to no mechanical filtration. Bioballs, sponges etc. can quickly saturate with debris and leach nitrates back into the system. Also I imagine that a herd of horses like you have require quite a bit of food to keep them happy. Do you have a skimmer? If so, what kind and what size tank is it rated for?

animallover 06-12-2009 07:02 AM

Help me, thanks all for your support
 
Thank you all sooooo much for responding! This is how I love to learn--from others experiences and knowledge. I DO have a skimmer, but I only run it three nights a week, as it seems my one male horse keeps getting pouch emphysema if I run it longer or more than that. The skimmer is an in sump skimmer and it says it is a Marineland MSPS100--this is what manager of Big Al's suggested for my 55g tank. My tank was aquired last November, so the tank pumps and hoses and such were already wired up. I can't find any info on the pumps (brand, size, etc;). I will try my best to describe my tank set-up. Here goes......My sump has two pumps with hoses going up into my tank--these hoses bring the water up into the tank. I have a hanging filter on the back of my tank going most of the way into the tank water. I have a filter in this that I clean weekly. The water is cycled from this filter down into the top of the sump and drains into the four tray filters. As the water drains through the trays, it pours over and turns the aeration wheel. On the other side of this is where I have the two pumps, my skimmer and my heater. I do realize that this is a more primitive set up but I still love it and it's what I know. So far. By looking at Marc's AMAZING tank set up, I have a loooong way to go, lol. One day at a time, eh? At the risk of sounding totally inept, is this tray style filter system called "mechanical filter"? The top three trays have a stiffer pourous kind of batton that I cut to fit the trays, and the bottom tray is perforated to allow the water to fall over the aeration wheel. (God, I hope this makes sense to anyone besides me). And how often should I be changing these filters, and do I change them all at once or do I do one per week to keep the media going? I was told it was not good to change these tray filters all at the same time, correct or no? I can't think of what other info to give as it is getting quite late and I keep nodding off, lol. Thanks to all! :lol:

Pescador 06-12-2009 07:48 AM

Sounds like a Marineland Tidal Pool maybe looks like this?
http://www.aquariumguys.com/tidepool.html
I'm not that familiar with them but hopefully someone on here has some tips on modding it.
Do you have much live rock?
I'm thinking the trays and wheel might have to go and maybe an upgrade for your skimmer.

fishytime 06-12-2009 02:10 PM

+1 on the above advice....sounds like what you have is quite the nitrate factory..... wet dry filters and sumps are great for fresh water setups....not so much for salt:neutral:


All times are GMT. The time now is 06:36 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.