Chris918
05/29/2018, 01:02 AM
Hello friends!
For all my aquariums I have used Red Sea salt (blue bucket) to achieve the parameters that I find desirable in my tanks. All of my tanks have 430 ppm Ca, 8 dKH, and around 1300 ppm Mg. I keep nutrients pretty low and things seem to work fine.
Now for my experiment. I'm converting a mixed tank I have into an SPS tank. Instead of using my normal salt, I figured I'd go with Red Sea's coral pro, which has elevated levels of the foundation elements for "increased coral growth." I'd like to see if there is any noticeable difference.
All of my corals in the current tank will be going to a new system with the exact same parameters. The fish in that tank, only a Royal Gramma and a Blue Damsel, will be staying. Will the changes in foundation elements, which will increase overtime via water changes with the new salt, negatively impact the fish?
Thank you all!
For all my aquariums I have used Red Sea salt (blue bucket) to achieve the parameters that I find desirable in my tanks. All of my tanks have 430 ppm Ca, 8 dKH, and around 1300 ppm Mg. I keep nutrients pretty low and things seem to work fine.
Now for my experiment. I'm converting a mixed tank I have into an SPS tank. Instead of using my normal salt, I figured I'd go with Red Sea's coral pro, which has elevated levels of the foundation elements for "increased coral growth." I'd like to see if there is any noticeable difference.
All of my corals in the current tank will be going to a new system with the exact same parameters. The fish in that tank, only a Royal Gramma and a Blue Damsel, will be staying. Will the changes in foundation elements, which will increase overtime via water changes with the new salt, negatively impact the fish?
Thank you all!