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Anonymous

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Just wondering if anyone has tried this? I set this tank up a few weeks ago in an empty 1 gallon glass Hex tank. Added one of those Corallife 2x 9 watt fixtures and a red sea nano filter. One chunk of live rock dug out of the depts of my fuge on my 220 - the rock is unfortunately covered in red turf algae but I am trying to get the unidentified red macro algae and the padina sp. algae to take off. I added a tiny Alpheus soror yesterday and he made a burrow under the rock.
 

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Anonymous

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:D

They're mangroves.
 

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brandon4291

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Hey guys your entries also got me to wondering where I saw a true Amano-style (or dutch, whatever) marine planted tank. Chock full of very well-placed (aquascaped for color, the Amano part) red, brown and green macroalgaes, some species I've never seen in the trade before, matter of fact the tank was solely a DSB, bunch of heavy live rock walls and purely macro, stacked wall-to-wall, no corals IIRC> I now believe I saw it in the printed version of TFH a while ago. The interesting part to me is the reversing of some of the standard trends in reefkeeping that would seemingly be necessary for this type of biotope. I recall FW planted systems ran with high lights and dense plant loads needing nitrogen literally hand fed in addition to the fish loads...the guys on plantedtank.net trade potassium nitrate KNO3 like it's going out of style and try their absolute best to prevent nitrates from reaching zero...lest their prize plants bleach (botanical chlorosis) and die off. It seems the marine version would be just as nitrogen-dependent, a 180 shift away from our norms. I would imagine that would also make a fine seahorse/pipefish display and I'll do my best to find the pics and post them over here with due credit. The pico/nano version of this approach is a sick breakthrough waiting to happen.
 

tinyreef

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brandon429":1ms6txt0 said:
I would imagine that would also make a fine seahorse/pipefish display and I'll do my best to find the pics and post them over here with due credit.
i was about to say, there's a number of setups over at shorgy that show various colors and types of macro. some of their featured tanks in the past showed very beautiful displays of this.

many refugiums are basically planted nanos. racemosa or halimeda forests were the ones i most often saw.

film-type microalgae was the main nemesis for these tho imo. sometimes it would even degrade into dino outbreaks if the nutrient levels got too skewed (i suspect flow rates to be a more critical aspect than nutrient).
 

Diana

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Im trying to get as many macros as possible to grow in my nano tank without overcrowding it... i love the look of macroalgae alongside corals.

In reference to that "Marine Planted Tank" brandon429, do you think it was the one Tom Barr did ages ago? I remember his post on Aquaria Central Forums and just did some digging to find his pictures. Truey amazing marine planted tank, with no corals.

By Tom Barr:
http://www.barrreport.com/gallery/showimage.php?i=40&c=9
http://www.barrreport.com/gallery/showimage.php?i=41&c=9

Website: http://www.barrreport.com
Original thread: http://www.aquariacentral.com/forum...58&page=1&pp=15&highlight=marine+planted+tank


So neat looking, eh?

Regards
-Diana
 

brandon4291

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Great Catch Diana, that's just what I was looking for. Don't recall if that was the exact setup that caught my eye in the reef mag, but the quality of Barr's approach is enough to replace it!


Rcsheng, I see what you mean. If these particular macros are placed in a non-native high-flow environment, they could be physically degraded with force and may spur a nutrient release back into the water thereby giving dinos or microalgae a chanced foothold? I can see how that might work and you've also mentioned yet another shift away from the norm, lo-flow marine setups. But, on that note, isn't it interesting to think that all that concentrated daytime photosynthetic activity (and resultant 02 production) would still keep the oxygen levels quite high, as we tend to use upper-level surface agitation to increase DO in our reefs but in the case of a planted setup you have direct transfer of oxygen straight into solution! I still am interested in seeing a years-old marine planted setup, to see how the husband handles the stresses of time and still keeps the aquascape in check...I'll read further on your posts you found Diana to see what kind of longevity we are deaing with here. Neat feedback guys and gals, good stuff
 

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