Now that I'm back from Wyoming to see the eclipse... If you've ever dived on a natural reef that has a fine size bed of sand, you've probably noticed rippled patterns. That's what I'm seeing in the new 90-gallon tank sand, and I measured the water velocity with a Marsh-McBirney electronic water velocity meter. The flow rate is a tad over 6" per second, which is what I measured on Kona, Hawaii reefs when the water was calm. So, if your sand bed isn't moving around (ripples, little 'tornadoes') you don't have what corals can experience on a calm day. Oh, the sand is CaribSea's Fiji pink sand (grain size perhaps 1/2 mm.) Their crushed aragonite with a much larger grain size is not moved at a velocity of 6"/second. I've always wanted to investigate ways to visually judge water flow, and this is a very small start. Experimental protocols are being developed to investigate how colony size (or more correctly, porosity of the coral's interstitial spaces) affects water flow.


. I'm not seeing any flow-related issues and the sand migration seems to have stabilized. The fine Fiji sand was laid over coarse aragonite sand which is staying in place but I'll keep an eye on it. Hopefully I can keep the as high as it is- there isn't a chance that any fish waste will ever accumulate on/in the sand bed. The issues I'm having are due to too much light generated by the inexpensive Chinese black box. A couple corals are lightening up a bit too much for my taste (theirs too for that matter.)

