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EDITORIAL
by TERRY SIEGEL
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recent photograph of a section of the Editor’s reef
tank. |
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For many reef keepers the onset of
hot, humid weather during the Summer months brings with a
particular set of problems. Heat and humidity coupled with the
heat generated by the intense lighting and water circulation pumps
can easily drive the water temperature in a reef tank to
dangerously high levels. I consider a temperature level of 84 F
sustained for more than a few days to be problematic, especially
with a reef tank that has marginal gas exchange due to inadequate
circulation. The higher the temperature the less oxygen the water
can hold.
In the first paragraph I mentioned
summer heat along with humidity, because many reef keepers – me
included – use either fans positioned above the tank’s water
surface or directed at the water surface of the sump to cool the
tank’s temperature. The use of fans this way is quite effective,
but with one serious caveat: cooling is accomplished via
evaporation, but evaporation is significantly diminished by
relatively high ambient humidity. Fortunately, during a heat wave,
there are things that the aquarist can do, without having to
resort to the expense of a chiller or area air conditioner. |
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If the heat wave
lasts for only a few days, it’s both safe and harmless to
photosynthetic corals to shorten the photo period, only use a few
lights, or only illuminate the tank at night when the ambient
temperature is lower. In fact, I know of several reef keepers who, in
order to reduce their electrical bill, illuminate their reef tank only
five days out of seven, and have had no adverse effects. In the wild,
the sun doesn’t significantly penetrate the clouds every day, and
there are tropical storms that reduce the water’s clarity, thereby
preventing sunlight from reaching wild coral’s photosynthetic algae
(zooxanthellae). It’s better to do without intense lighting for a
few days than to risk your animals to dangerously high temperatures.
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Copyright 2002 Advanced Aquarist's Online
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