High PH increasing SPS growth

alex77619

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Under same KH 8, I am experiencing faster growth for raising PH from 8.4 to 8.6
I temporary doing dosing instead of my Ca Reactor due to I ran out of CO2.
Due to SPS needing calcifies to grow bone. Seems like higher PH is giving me better growth.
My other parameter are as follow:
PH8.6
KH8
Ca 450
Mg 1450
NO3 5
PO4 0.06
 
6/13
65397fa1b13bcb7932df78273f2edc84.jpg


6/20
c9aadb12e0902fe70501381480300314.jpg
 
I do expect higher pH often leads to faster hard coral growth.

Randy, correct me if I’m wrong

Because in our reef tank

Three things balance determines our PH

[H2CO3]、[HCO3-]、[CO3-2]

Where they are buffering the ph

And H2CO3 is acidic while CO3-2 is base.

That is why if u have a pure baking soda HCO3- the ph will tend to be 8.4

2c0c30801130c9beb43927f775f1d145.jpg


6322dc0598db2a4cb5a4ac62f666af7f.jpg


PH8.4 is the first balance point of carbonate.

And how coral growth

Ca+2 + 2HCO3- --> CaCO3 + H2O + CO2

When u are at a same KH, higher PH tends to have more HCO3- which also is easer for coral to create their skeletons.
 
Randy, correct me if I’m wrong

Because in our reef tank

Three things balance determines our PH

[H2CO3]、[HCO3-]、[CO3-2]

Where they are buffering the ph

And H2CO3 is acidic while CO3-2 is base.

That is why if u have a pure baking soda HCO3- the ph will tend to be 8.4

2c0c30801130c9beb43927f775f1d145.jpg


6322dc0598db2a4cb5a4ac62f666af7f.jpg


PH8.4 is the first balance point of carbonate.

And how coral growth

Ca+2 + 2HCO3- --> CaCO3 + H2O + CO2

When u are at a same KH, higher PH tends to have more HCO3- which also is easer for coral to create their skeletons.

I do not know (and do not know if it is known) whether corals take up carbonate directly, or take up bicarbonate and spit back out an H+.

Either of those two things is easier to accomplish as the pH rises in seawater.

They are also easier to accomplish as the alkalinity rises at a fixed pH, and growth likely increases under those conditions too.
 
I do not know (and do not know if it is known) whether corals take up carbonate directly, or take up bicarbonate and spit back out an H+.

Either of those two things is easier to accomplish as the pH rises in seawater.

They are also easier to accomplish as the alkalinity rises at a fixed pH, and growth likely increases under those conditions too.

following figures show how corals forming skeletons.

e217df56ce15291aa4608e099dc7bcd5.jpg


68813301e4477fda4511f228f5a58e9b.jpg
 

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