Calcium phosphate

Fishy888

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While removing some GHA yesterday I accidentally bumped my green digitata. It was a fairly soft bump but it was still enough to frag the digi.

It got me wondering whether corals that are growing in a high phosphate environment use much ALK. My ALK is fairly steady but I don’t have tons of sticks yet so I can’t tell if ALK is being consumed. As easily as the green digitata broke I have to assume it’s making its skeleton almost entirely out of calcium phosphate.

My green and purple digis are growing nicely. Both of them are small frags. I have two encrusting montis as well. One is a Mardi Gras montipora and the other is a reverse Superman montipora.
 
High phosphate level is known to inhibit coral skeleton growth by restricting calcium intake.

 
As easily as the green digitata broke I have to assume it’s making its skeleton almost entirely out of calcium phosphate.

That does not happen. Skeletons may be more brittle, but they are not primarily calcium phosphate.
 
That does not happen. Skeletons may be more brittle, but they are not primarily calcium phosphate.
I don’t know why I had it in my head that calcium carbonate couldn’t bind to calcium phosphate. Thank you for letting me know that.
 
High phosphate level is known to inhibit coral skeleton growth by restricting calcium intake.

I appreciate the articles. I still have lots to learn clearly. Thank you.
 

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