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Unread 07/18/2007, 09:00 AM   #1
ray22
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POLL ... Best tank tempture for a reef tank

i have my chiller set to keep the tank temp no higher than 81 degrees. at night it goes down to 78 degrees .. it is mostly sps corals .. what do you keep yours at and why .. thank you


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Unread 07/18/2007, 09:02 AM   #2
sir_dudeguy
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wheres the poll???

I keep mine as close to 80 as i can. That way it gives me a few degrees both ways...i try to stay at 79 but in Arizona...ha! Right now the lowest i can get it is 80 at night and 82 at day.


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Unread 07/18/2007, 09:10 AM   #3
RichConley
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75-82 for me.


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Unread 07/18/2007, 09:12 AM   #4
somethingphishy
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78-82


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Unread 07/18/2007, 09:17 AM   #5
MACJMC
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Unread 07/18/2007, 09:46 AM   #6
HowardW
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Unread 07/18/2007, 09:46 AM   #7
easye123
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80-83 ( texas heat sucks)


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Current Tank Info: 90g BB sps 30g sump. 2x175w mh. 2x110w vho act. Vortech. tunze 6025. ER rs 135. TLF phos. ACjr
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Unread 07/18/2007, 10:10 AM   #8
oct2274
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i keep mine at 81 degrees...........average temperature that corals grow at in the oceans around the world is 83 degrees i believe


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Unread 07/18/2007, 10:19 AM   #9
HBtank
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78-81.

I had mine rock solid at 79, but now set my controller to allow for some variation.


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Current Tank Info: 80g tank, re-starting a reef after a zoanthid nudibranch plauge, followed by months of steady and unstoppable STN/RTN, crashed; stayed FOWLR for a couple years, currently an aiptasia dominated reef tank with fishies and BERGHIA
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Unread 07/18/2007, 10:20 AM   #10
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Some say the sun rises in the East. Some say it rises in the West. The truth must be somewhere in the middle.

Current Tank Info: tore them down to move and haven't had the time or money to set them back up
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Unread 07/18/2007, 10:44 AM   #11
LobsterOfJustice
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I remember when zoanthids were called things like "green" and "orange" and not "reverse gorilla nipple."

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Unread 07/18/2007, 11:14 AM   #12
bhdmc
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Unread 07/18/2007, 11:24 AM   #13
fishysteve
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Unread 07/18/2007, 11:30 AM   #14
sammyfish
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Unread 07/18/2007, 11:36 AM   #15
Serioussnaps
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jesus...are you kidding me? another one of these....there is no best dang temperature..

higher temperature equals higher metabolisms....for fish and for corals


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Unread 07/18/2007, 11:37 AM   #16
oct2274
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correct and lower temperatures below 78 usually mean death or no growth from corals unless they are from colder waters, which most corals are not


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Unread 07/18/2007, 03:20 PM   #17
mr_o98
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Current Tank Info: 90g fish only tank, Green Chromis, Ocellaris clown, 6 line Wrasse, Convict Tang, Foxface Lo, Decorator Goby, Lemon Drop butterfly, Flameback Angel - 30g sump, Euro Reef skimmer, 2 250w MH
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Unread 07/18/2007, 03:24 PM   #18
edwing206
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Don't fish grow faster and die faster too when the temp is higher?


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Unread 07/18/2007, 06:22 PM   #19
greenbean36191
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Over the range of normal temperatures they've evolved in the difference is insignificant.


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Some say the sun rises in the East. Some say it rises in the West. The truth must be somewhere in the middle.

Current Tank Info: tore them down to move and haven't had the time or money to set them back up
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Unread 07/18/2007, 06:30 PM   #20
areze
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how many fish die of natural causes? Im not sure what the lifespan of a fish is supposed to be though, I just assumed it was in the order of many many years.


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Unread 07/18/2007, 06:42 PM   #21
areze
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also, only thing that matters IMO is keeping the temp constant. better to have it always 83degrees than be 83 in the day and drop it to 79 at night.


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Unread 07/18/2007, 07:20 PM   #22
sirreal63
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Temps on a reef (where corals actually occur in the wild) have a temp. variation daily at times as reaching as much as 86 degrees. This is a good thing as it allows them to adapt to change. When we keep corals in our tank and never let the temp vary and then something happens and the temp does increase they do not react well to it. It is this reason I let my tank go from 78 in the morning to 82 in the evening. I have the chiller set to come on at 83 though it rarely ever does. Keep your water parameters steady, let your temps vary and your lighting vary.

Of course this is just my opinion but given the fact that in nature they experience a temp change I try and replicate that.


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Last edited by sirreal63; 07/18/2007 at 07:48 PM.
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Unread 07/18/2007, 07:46 PM   #23
CookieJar
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79-83. I've had a bunch of corals live through a heat disaster where the tank reached 99. About half died though.


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Unread 07/18/2007, 07:55 PM   #24
saltydude
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77 all day long.


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Unread 07/18/2007, 08:24 PM   #25
Anemonebuff
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78-83 depending on the season.


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