Can scraping the coralline off the sides of the tank cause alk to jump? I cleaned up the glass today and saw a jump in alk, which is fairly stable due to auto dosing 2x a day. No other variables.
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Can scraping the coralline off the sides of the tank cause alk to jump? I cleaned up the glass today and saw a jump in alk, which is fairly stable due to auto dosing 2x a day. No other variables.
Some anecdotal evidence from Jim Welsh suggests this is possible. Check out his demonstration video from MACNA. Start watching around 15:51. He mentions that after scraping off a bunch of coralline algae, he observed carbonate alkalinity beginning to rise.
The degree to which your alkaliniy "jumps" as you describe it would depend upon the amount of coralline algae you have as well as the other calcifying organisms in the tank. But logically and from Jim's experience, it doesn't seem too farfetched.
Thanks for the info. I know it takes up alkalinity, and wondered where that "goes" when the algae is broken up. I don't know if it dissolves, or falls to the substrate, or what. I did see a healthy jump in alk over a time when all I did was scrape coralline....
If you scrape coralline and demand for it thus goes down, he'd perhaps see a rise in alkalinity because the scraped coralline may reduce its uptake of additional alkalinioty.

