Kalkwasser Question

Gwitness

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I dose kalkwasser through my Tunze ATO and I love it and it keeps my tank pretty stable, but for the last week or so my ALK will read about 8.4, 8.3 range and I try to check ALK at the same time every day....Every now and then my tank will have a boost and i will check it and it will read 9.2 or so....It will bump up about .7 or so over a day or 2??? I dose the max I can per gallon and I use the same measuring cup every time I fill my ATO up with it??? Is there any reason for this happening? or are my corals just being funky and not absorbing ALK as much randomly? Calcium and Magnesium are 425 and 1320 and stay very consistent! I just want to get this under control because I know ALK is the most important to keep consistent! Any ideas on what this could be?
 
I knew about the evaporation, but I just didn't think it changed day to day... I thought it was more seasonal! Guess not!! Haha thank you for the knowledge once again Randy! Is that something I need to be worried about? I know you run yours through your Ato also, anything I should do differently or is it okay how it is
 
Ahhhhhhhh I gotcha well maybe I need to go more that route then!! haha.. I don't have tons of sps but I do have a nice amount.. That explains why some are perfectly fine and some don't do good at all... What about temp swings.. What is a reasonable swing that is okay for corals/fish throughout the day and night
 
I don't do ulns either... I have about 21 fish and just try to not overfeed and do my water changes... In process of setting up a refugium though to help with phosphates
 
Here's my comment on temperature swings (last paragraph):

https://www.reef2reef.com/forums/re...-coral-reef-aquarium-randy-holmes-farley.html

Temperature


Temperature impacts reef aquarium inhabitants in a variety of ways. First and foremost, the animals' metabolic rates rise as temperature rises. They may consequently use or produce more oxygen, carbon dioxide, nutrients, calcium, and alkalinity at higher temperatures. This higher metabolic rate can also increase both their growth rate and waste production at higher temperatures.


Another important impact of temperature is on the chemical aspects of the aquarium. The solubility of dissolved gases such as oxygen and carbon dioxide, for example, change with temperature. Oxygen, in particular, can be a concern because it is less soluble at higher temperature.


So what does this imply for aquarists?


In most instances, trying to match the natural environment in a reef aquarium is a worthy goal. Temperature may, however, be a parameter that requires accounting for the practical considerations of a small closed system that might suffer a power failure and trap the organisms in a small amount of poorly aerated water, something that rarely happens on a natural reef. Looking to the ocean as a guide for setting temperatures in reef aquaria may also present complications because corals grow well in such a wide range of temperatures. The greatest variety of corals, however, are found in water whose average temperature is about 83-86° F.
During normal functioning of a reef aquarium, the oxygen level and the metabolic rate of the aquarium inhabitants are not often important issues, and many reef tanks do well with temperatures in the low to mid 80's. During a crisis such as a power failure, however, the dissolved oxygen can be rapidly used up. Lower temperatures not only allow a higher oxygen level before an emergency, but will also slow the consumption of that oxygen by slowing the metabolism of the aquarium's inhabitants. The production of ammonia as organisms begin to die may also be slower at lower temperatures. For reasons such as this, one may choose to strike a practical balance between temperatures that are too high (even if corals normally thrive in the ocean at those temperatures), and those that are too low.


These natural guidelines leave a fairly wide range of acceptable temperatures. I keep my aquarium at about 80-81° F year-round. I am actually more inclined to keep the aquarium cooler in the summer, when a power failure would most likely warm the aquarium, and higher in winter, when a power failure would most likely cool it. All things considered, I recommend temperatures in the range of 76-83° F unless there is a very clear reason to keep it outside that range.


One additional comment on temperatures: having a small temperature swing is not necessarily undesirable. While temperature stability may sound like a desirable attribute, and in some cases it may be, studies have shown that organisms that are acclimated to daily temperature swings become more able to deal with unexpected temperature excursions. So while a tank creature that normally experiences only 80° F may be very healthy, the same organism adapted to a range from 78° F to 82° F may be better able to deal with an aquarium that accidentally rises to 86° F
 
It all makes sense now! Thank you once again and I really appreciate the help Randy... Thank you! I'm sure I will have more questions for you eventually!
 

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