I’m thinking about giving a 3 day black out a try for my dinos, just wondering if anyone has any tips to ensure everything makes it through ok. I currently have euphylia, zoa’s, Montipora, acan, and a candy cane coral. Thanks for any advice!
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Thank you for such an in depth response. I am doing everything you have mentioned so far other than adjusting my lighting schedule. I did receive my microscope today but it did not come with slides like it stated it would so I am waiting until Wednesday to post a picture and verify the type of Dinos. I guess I’m just being impatient.That is a band-aid at best, so you should know that going in. 3 day black out not likely to kill anything, but seems over-zealous in my opinion. If you want to 'calm them down' try reducing the over-all photo period and especially cut short any 'ramp up' and 'ramp down'.
The best method for dealing with Dino's is really the dirty tank method. If you can stabilize phosphate and nitrate in the 0.05-0.1 phos, 5-10 nitrate) tested daily, then combine that with reduced photo periods inside the display (with perhaps increased ones down in the sump) you should encourage healthy competition.
Although it seems counter-intuitive, I would recommend bacteria dosing perhaps a good bit to start and then a more standard dose over the next 2 weeks to help increase that competition with something like Microbacter7 or Vibrant, but NOT nopox or organic carbon.
Be advised bacteria will consume resources, so even though you are adding some bacteria into the mix, you still have to get your nitrates/phosphates up (slowly, and then stabilized.)
I would personally start a program like the one I am suggesting and get started on your first day of the program with a 24 hour black-out followed by a reduced photo period there after. I would also aggressively "mechanically clean" the display on that first day. (Hit it with a brush, fan your hand, take a power head, etc.) Don't let it just set up shop and do whatever it pleases. That should get you back on track on a few weeks time~
You didn't mention what species of dino's you're dealing with, but I'm assuming it's the kind that doesn't die from UV.


