Articles tagged parameter tracking
- Reef Tracking Why Parameter History Matters More Than a Pretty Reef Tank Chart Charts are useful. Parameter history is what saves tanks. Here is the difference, why it matters, and what to look for in a reef tank app that takes the long view seriously.
- Reef Chemistry Reef Tank Nitrate and Phosphate: Target Range, Testing, and Why "Zero" Is Bad Both nitrate and phosphate are required for healthy coral growth in trace amounts. Zero is not the goal. Here is the full guide to managing nutrients in a reef tank.
- Reef Chemistry Reef Tank Magnesium: Target Range, Why It Matters, Testing, and Dosing Magnesium is the silent enabler of reef chemistry. It does not visibly do anything until it drops too low. Then suddenly your calcium and alkalinity stop responding to dosing. Here is what reef keepers need to know.
- Reef Chemistry Reef Tank Calcium: Target Range, Testing, Dosing, and Balance with Alkalinity Calcium is the structural element that builds coral skeletons. It moves slower than alkalinity but matters just as much. Here is the complete reef-keeper guide to calcium, testing, dosing, and balance.
- Reef Chemistry Reef Tank Alkalinity: Complete Guide to dKH, meq/L, Testing, and Stability Alkalinity is the single most important reef parameter to track. It moves daily, drives coral skeletal growth, and is the first thing to drift when something is off. Here is the practical guide for reef keepers.
- Reef Chemistry Reef Tank ORP: What It Means, Target Range, and Why It Is Less Important Than Reefers Think ORP measures oxidation-reduction potential: how oxidizing the water is. Reef keepers measure it, ozone hobbyists obsess over it, but most reef tanks run fine without ever consciously thinking about it.
- Reef Chemistry Reef Tank Stability: Why One Perfect Test Result Does Not Tell the Whole Story A single perfect alkalinity reading does not mean the tank is stable. Stability lives in the movement of your parameters week over week. This is what that looks like and how to measure it.
- Reef Chemistry Reef Tank Salinity: Target Range (1.025 / 35 ppt), Testing, and Top-Off Math Salinity sounds simple (keep it at 1.025), but evaporation moves it constantly and most beginner-tank problems start with bad refractometer calibration. Here is the practical guide.
- Reef Chemistry Reef Tank pH: Target Range, Why It Drops at Night, and How to Stabilize It pH is the most rhythmic parameter in a reef tank. It rises during the day and drops at night, and indoor CO2 is the #1 reason a tank runs low. Here is the practical guide.
- Reef Chemistry Reef Tank Temperature: Target Range (76–80°F), Stability, Heaters, and Chillers Reef tank temperature should sit between 76 and 80°F with the smallest possible daily swing. Both heat and cold spikes can wipe out corals, but the everyday killer is failed heaters cooking a tank overnight.