MikeB
New member
Hi,
I have spent the last year with my 6 year old 65 gallon main system set up to hopefully trigger a coral spawn using Apex. That came to a screeching halt this week when I tried to alter the Apex local time manually and inadvertently crashed/locked up the Apex for 48 hours, during which a combination of hypoxia and a heater stuck on max killed all of my mature colonies. The response I received from Apex support was that "this doesn't happen 99% of the time, you shouldn't have tried to change the time without knowing what you're doing" to paraphrase. While I do accept responsibility for this disaster, I'm admittedly concerned about an operating system/reef computer that locks up (unresponsive to multiple reboots) if you push the wrong button.
I intend to continue to pursue home coral spawning. It's an awesome thing to try and is within hobbyist range to do. Scientists are doing this all over the world literally using the same equipment we use to grow corals in our tanks at home. No special equipment is required, just patience and lots of stability.
I have been building a 4' x 8' 320 gallon trough coral grow-out system for the past 3 months. My mature colonies were slated to move to this tank in a few months. I had planned to run this under Apex control, but obviously have some misgivings about that. Now I am looking to see if Hydros would be an option.
To trigger spawning, you need the following:
1) Moonlight simulation (preferably with 4100K warm white diodes instead of the 470 nm blue that Apex uses). This included moonrise/moonset and new moon programming.
2) Seasonal water temperature variation that changes on a linear monthly basis throughout the year. Convincing corals that they are actually in the ocean requires imitating ocean temperature swings (roughly 76 F to 85 F depending on month/season). Once temperatures reach about 81.5 F, corals are more likely to spawn. Daily temperature cycling including daily day/night temperature changes of ~1-2 degrees may also be important.
3) Sunrise/sunset programming.
4) Light intensity modulation per month. Solar intensity over reefs varies on a monthly basis throughout the year.
Corals spawn when a specific set of conditions are reached involving temperature, days after the full moon, and time after sunset. It is so predictable that charts are made of the Great Barrier Reef and Caribbean coral spawn times down to the exact time and date. Following these rules is how coral spawning in aquaria has been triggered by scientists to date.
So after all of that diatribe, is this something that could be added to Hydros programming? If so, I will happily test it for you.
Thanks in advance,
Mike
I have spent the last year with my 6 year old 65 gallon main system set up to hopefully trigger a coral spawn using Apex. That came to a screeching halt this week when I tried to alter the Apex local time manually and inadvertently crashed/locked up the Apex for 48 hours, during which a combination of hypoxia and a heater stuck on max killed all of my mature colonies. The response I received from Apex support was that "this doesn't happen 99% of the time, you shouldn't have tried to change the time without knowing what you're doing" to paraphrase. While I do accept responsibility for this disaster, I'm admittedly concerned about an operating system/reef computer that locks up (unresponsive to multiple reboots) if you push the wrong button.
I intend to continue to pursue home coral spawning. It's an awesome thing to try and is within hobbyist range to do. Scientists are doing this all over the world literally using the same equipment we use to grow corals in our tanks at home. No special equipment is required, just patience and lots of stability.
I have been building a 4' x 8' 320 gallon trough coral grow-out system for the past 3 months. My mature colonies were slated to move to this tank in a few months. I had planned to run this under Apex control, but obviously have some misgivings about that. Now I am looking to see if Hydros would be an option.
To trigger spawning, you need the following:
1) Moonlight simulation (preferably with 4100K warm white diodes instead of the 470 nm blue that Apex uses). This included moonrise/moonset and new moon programming.
2) Seasonal water temperature variation that changes on a linear monthly basis throughout the year. Convincing corals that they are actually in the ocean requires imitating ocean temperature swings (roughly 76 F to 85 F depending on month/season). Once temperatures reach about 81.5 F, corals are more likely to spawn. Daily temperature cycling including daily day/night temperature changes of ~1-2 degrees may also be important.
3) Sunrise/sunset programming.
4) Light intensity modulation per month. Solar intensity over reefs varies on a monthly basis throughout the year.
Corals spawn when a specific set of conditions are reached involving temperature, days after the full moon, and time after sunset. It is so predictable that charts are made of the Great Barrier Reef and Caribbean coral spawn times down to the exact time and date. Following these rules is how coral spawning in aquaria has been triggered by scientists to date.
So after all of that diatribe, is this something that could be added to Hydros programming? If so, I will happily test it for you.
Thanks in advance,
Mike




