rocketeer
Wed, 13th Oct 2004, 07:53 PM
I thought it would never happen to me. I came back from vacation and found my thermometer had broken in my 120 gal reef. I have no idea where the little metal balls are.
I know that's a bad thing, but how bad is it? Is there anything I can use as a "canary in the coal mine" or a test? The little balls look like iron or an iron alloy. Can that be measured? How much is toxic? It would seem to me that they will deteriorate in a matter of weeks or months. Maybe I can do extra water changes until then. What will die first. I know metal is bad for inverts but is it worse for cnidarians (Spelling?) or for crabs and the like?
I am inclined to stick my head in the sand until something looks bad, then take action. Or do I really need to start a whole new reef now? I would rather do a hundred water changes over the next six months than tear the whole thing down. But I need a way to measure the toxicity.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but when people sink ships and oil rigs to make artificial reefs, there would be a lot of metal present. Right?
Jack
I know that's a bad thing, but how bad is it? Is there anything I can use as a "canary in the coal mine" or a test? The little balls look like iron or an iron alloy. Can that be measured? How much is toxic? It would seem to me that they will deteriorate in a matter of weeks or months. Maybe I can do extra water changes until then. What will die first. I know metal is bad for inverts but is it worse for cnidarians (Spelling?) or for crabs and the like?
I am inclined to stick my head in the sand until something looks bad, then take action. Or do I really need to start a whole new reef now? I would rather do a hundred water changes over the next six months than tear the whole thing down. But I need a way to measure the toxicity.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but when people sink ships and oil rigs to make artificial reefs, there would be a lot of metal present. Right?
Jack