Saltwater Tank
Saltwater Aquariums;
Equipment, Chemistry, Maintenance

Saltwater Aquarium Equipment
You will have the best success by using all three of the following filters. A biological filter with
ceramic rings to remove toxic ammonia which is created from fish waste, decaying plant material
and uneaten food. The filter will actually convert the toxic ammonia to nitrate which is harmless to
the fish.

A Chemical filter with carbon to extract toxins from the water. A mechanical filter with filter
floss to which push the water through the floss and acts like a strainer. This strainer will catch
particles that are free-floating in the water because they cannot pass through the tiny openings in
the floss material.

It is best to use stainless steel equipment because other metals will rust.

You will also need to have adequate water circulation in your saltwater aquarium. The saltwater
solution will have lower amounts of dissolved oxygen when compared to freshwater aquariums and
the tank water surface needs to be disrupted to maximize oxygen transfer with the surrounding
atmosphere.

Use a gravel that has calcerous material such as crushed coral, argonite, or dolomite to help buffer
and stabilize the water.  

A freshwater lighting system will be fine in your saltwater tank, but if you add invertebrates, you
will need to increase the amount of light.

Water Source For Your Saltwater Tank
The source water you use for a saltwater tank is important. Water from your tap contains chlorine
and chloramine and these can kill fish. Phosphates can cause massive hair algae growth over time
and possibly outbreaks of red slime algae.

If you use the reverse osmosis water purifier, combined with de-ionizing resins, the water will
become 98% pure. If you cannot afford this you may use distilled water, as long as it has not been
stored in copper containers, because copper will kill invertebrates.

Chemistry Balance
It is important to monitor the ammonia and nitrite levels and watch the PH, which tends to fall
over time. You can mix a tablespoon of sodium bicarbonate (baking soda), with dechlorinated water
and slowly add it to the tank over a couple hours. You will see a fall in PH, but it will stabilize to 8.2
over time.  

In a few weeks your aquarium will mature, and you will see brown algae beginning to cover
everything in the tank. Clean the tank weekly. In time the green algae will replace the brown algae.
If this does not happen you will need to increase the lighting so that the green algae can compete
more successfully.

After the tank stabilizes you can do the first major water change, as well as cleaning the gravel
with a cleaning product. The new water you add (40 to 50%), needs to have a chemistry balance
similar to what you already had in the tank. Keep the PH within 0.2 and the water within a degree
or 2 of what it had been.

Aquarium Tank Maintenance
Following the first water changeover, you can change the water once a month. Do algae scaping each
week.

Feeding Saltwater Fish
Feed the fish 2 times per week with a varied diet of flake food, shrimp and clam. A combined food
of flake food and frozen live brine shrimp is good. Alternate between shrimp and clam. If you have
herbivorous (meat and plant eating fish), also give them romaine lettuce or an algae called Nori.

Suggested Equipment and Supplies For A Successful Saltwater Tank:
30 gallon tank and Hood                
Stand                        
Phillips Ultralume                
Actinic Blue        
Electronic Ballast        
Prefilter
DIY w/d filter                       
Eheim 1250                        
30" Air-driven skimmer        
Hagen 801 powerhead                
Tetra Luft G Airpump              
Hagen 301 (circulation)                
100W heater                
20 lbs dolomite                       
Misc. Rocks                        
Fish
Saltwater Aquarium
Saltwater Fish Information
Freshwater Fish Information
Aquarium Coral Information and Care
Aquarium Fish Information- Tips For Beginners
Aquarium Invertebrates Information and Care
Photos of Aquarium Fish, Coral and Invertebrates
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