From last month's article:
In normal seawater, equation 3 holds (supersaturation). The product of calcium and carbonate is about 3 times the Ksp* of aragonite and 5 times that of calcite (aragonite and calcite are different crystal forms of calcium carbonate; these differences will be discussed more in future articles).
...
I may be jumping the gun so to speak, but I am interested in the argonite/calcite distinction as far a substrate is concerned. As a grad student reefer on a extremely limited 'about to be married' budget, would other calcium carbonate forms be able to dissolve minimum levels of calcium in the water? Can calcium requirements be met with substrate alone? I can get ahold of granular 'calcium carbonate,' but this is probably just land mined limestone in calcite form. Although I am cost conscious, doing the "right" thing for my future corals and gaining a true knowledge of what is going on in my tank are more important, so if this will be covered in 'future articles,' I can wait with patience...
Thanks!
In normal seawater, equation 3 holds (supersaturation). The product of calcium and carbonate is about 3 times the Ksp* of aragonite and 5 times that of calcite (aragonite and calcite are different crystal forms of calcium carbonate; these differences will be discussed more in future articles).
...
I may be jumping the gun so to speak, but I am interested in the argonite/calcite distinction as far a substrate is concerned. As a grad student reefer on a extremely limited 'about to be married' budget, would other calcium carbonate forms be able to dissolve minimum levels of calcium in the water? Can calcium requirements be met with substrate alone? I can get ahold of granular 'calcium carbonate,' but this is probably just land mined limestone in calcite form. Although I am cost conscious, doing the "right" thing for my future corals and gaining a true knowledge of what is going on in my tank are more important, so if this will be covered in 'future articles,' I can wait with patience...
Thanks!