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Unread 03/15/2013, 11:45 AM   #15
hkgar
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Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Dewitt MI
Posts: 5,051
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sk8r View Post
Let's talk beyond water removal---if you are growing lps or softie corals, too good a skimmer is going to take nutrients from them: remember that they are living filters, and if underfed, they will not do as well. Likewise fish like mandarins rely on copepods, which in turn rely on algaes. Your snails and crabs and other inverts make their living from waste. So yes, if you are doing sps corals, that require crystal-clear water, strong skimming is a good idea. If not, survey your inhabitants and figure what you will lose if you do that. Same goes for hyper-removal of phosphate through a gfo. A lot is bad for corals; too little is bad, too.
It seems that this would mean that if you want to have an SPS tank, heavy skimming is good. But if you had the living filters you mentioned they would be deprived of food source and therefore not do well. Therefore you should not have them in an SPS tank as that would at the least be cruelity.

Not trying to be sarcastic, just logical


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180 gallon, 40 gallon sump, 3 250 W MH + 4 80W ATI T5's, MTC MVX 36 Skimmer, Apex controller Aquamaxx T-3 CaRx

Current Tank Info: A 2 Barred Rabbitfish, Red Head Salon, Yellow/Purple, McMaster Fairy, Possum, 2 Leopard Wrasses, Kole, & Atlantic Blue Tangs, 2 Percula Clown, 3 PJ and 1 Banggai Cardinalfish , Swallowtail, Bellus and Coral Beauty Angels
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