How many topic titles come by like that, eh?
I returned the hobby a couple years ago. Back in the 90's I was a lot more involved and had a more ambitious setup that was also largely automated. I was out of the country and an extended power outage wiped out everything and I left the hobby until a couple years ago.
I set up a modest tank, a 29 gallon that I intend to be a "fish only with live rock" style. At the moment the only critters are a small Percula Clown and a little damsel. There are a small handful of turbo snails. Lighting is a marineland LED "reef" model with the whites on about 8 hours/day.
To make a long story short and sweet, I have been continuing to fight a losing battle against cyanobacteria (red-slime) and brown algae (diatoms). I've also got a few patches of thick stands of green hair algae.
About a month ago I upgraded my skimmer to Reef Octopus BH 100 which I thought should be overkill for a simple 29 gallon tank. It's producing lots of foul-smelling tea-colored water (thicker gunk builds up around the inside lip but doesn't make it into the cup). I do 20% water changes about every other week.
I use a 75-gpd RO/DI filter that's a little over a year old (I have neglected to replace the sediment and carbon-block filters, new replacements are now on the way).
When I measure phosphate and nitrate, they are never detectable. My background is in chemistry and ecology, so this reading doesn't surprise me as all the nutrient is obviously rapidly incorporated into biomass.
My questions:
1. I have a small (less than 2 cm thick) bed of aragonite gravel on the bottom of the tank. Is this simply acting as a nutrient sink? Should I get rid of it?
2. Assuming the replacement cartridges are not enough to reduce the addition of phosphates/silicates, should I consider a phosphate reactor?
3. I'm experimenting with dosing Kalk to precipitate phosphates. Thoughts? Comments?
Thanks!