The following excerpt has been taken from the Reef Notes
series of books featuring questions answered by Julian Sprung and have
been printed here with his full permission. Please check back frequently
as we will be adding different topics on a regular basis. All
previously printed topic will be held in an archive link.
Topic: Dead Coralline and Tufa Rock in the Reef Aquarium
Q: I am going to use
dead coral as a base for my live rock. Is this a good idea or do you
have a better idea? How often and how much live rock can be put in at
one time?
A: There are many
questions which don't have a clear-cut yes or no answer, and your first
one is one of these. I can tell you that my usual response to this
question is that using dead base rock won't result in some horribly
disastrous explosion, and it is true that invertebrates and algae will
spread and colonize the "new territory," but I still prefer to create a
reef tank using all living rock. It is not true that underlying rocks
"will die away" as I have heard my uninformed hobbyists preach. Good
quality rock will have encrusting sponges and coralline algae that will
proliferate beneath, and between, the rocks. It is hard for me to
explain exactly why I prefer to use all living rock considering that
recolonization occurs, but I'll give it a shot. First, each live rock
you purchased already has been colonized by an enormous variety of
bacteria, protozoans, invertebrates, and algae, while a mere fraction of
these are manifest as a result of the particular environmental
conditions (temperature, light and water movement, nutrient supply,
etc.) that existed where the rock was collected. Each rock, therefore,
has a potential to produce a lot of life. The less live rock you use the
lower that potential production is, and the colonization onto other
rocks which occurs is limited to far fewer species that can exist on a
single live rock. I have noticed that aquaria using all live rock have a
greater variety of algae and invertebrates, and that the source of the
rock (shore versus reef) makes a significant difference in the ultimate
captive reef produced. Finally, I suspect that starting out with all
live rock has further advantage in the production of an actual plankton
cycle involving bacteria, protozoans, algae, crustaceans, various,
invertebrate larvae, as well as invertebrate-generated detritus and
plant detritus with attached bacteria and protozoans. This cycle is
natural and perpetual and, in my opinion, sufficiently meets the needs
of most filter feeding invertebrates without the need for supplemental
additions. Every reef keeping aquarist have his or her own recipe for
adding rock to the aquarium.
When fresh live rock is
received, each rock should be carefully cleaned by vigorous shaking in
saltwater (never ever put a live rock in freshwater) and stripped off
all macroalgae. I do not recommend scrubbing the rocks as common
practice since I believe that many desirable species could be lost this
way. Scrubbing is only useful in the incidence of fouling. As a point of
interest, most of the algae species stripped off by hand will grow back
under proper conditions, even if the rocks are kept in the dark
initially for many months.
If the rock is fresh and
the algae is not excessive or rotting, it can be left alone (don't
strip off plating red coralline algae) and of course the rock can be
illuminated. Rocks with zoanthids or coralimorphs (i.e. Ricordea Florida)
definitely should be illuminated. Some aquarists misunderstood my
recommendations here, which were for those rocks used to build the reef
structure on which one wants to encourage proliferation of coralline
algae.
Most notable is that you
have used dead based rock to build your reef. A few pieces here and
their to prop up a specimen or live rock is ok, but when dead rock is
used as the principle base structure, hair algae is difficult to avoid.
Hair algae "likes" to grow on bare limestone rocks, like tufa, and
perpetuates its presence on these rocks by trapping nutrient rich
detritus in the network of its tangled filaments. Also, the porous
structure of tufa tends to trap detritus and encourages algae growth.
Live rocks have encrusting coralline algae growing which effectively
retard the growth of hair algae on the rock. If the corallines die, and
bare limestone is exposed, the hair algae has a chance to gain a
foothold, but it may not since there are also tiny flea-like crustaceans
called amphipods which live on the rocks and come out at night to graze
on algae.
To maintain good growth
of coralline algae, you need to maintain a calcium level of at least 400
mg/l, a hardness of 7dkh or higher, and keep up with your strontium
additions. Ideally you should be making Kalkwasser by adding a teaspoon
of calcium hydroxide or calcium oxide to each gallon of your make-up
water, and adding this solution slowly to the tank by means of an
automatic water make-up system or by a drip system.