Its my experience that our systems are capable of great flux, just like in the wild, and that we may have death, regrowth, reallocation, and successions and that if we sit back and watch, they all come and go, passing, renewing, and changing. I like that. I mean, if its a goal to have a set set of growths with no losses and no blooms, etc., then intervention is probably required. But, I don't look for that. I like watching the changes, for better and worse. Losing animals in a reef tank, so long as it is not by negligence, is part and parcel of it all.
I liked a quote at one of the MACNA lectures about starting a tank, putting in a bunch of frags and seeing which ones live and die....the ones that live are well adapted to the tank and grow...the ones that aren't die and aren't replaced. Same thing happens on reefs. I think this is a good philosophy to adopt.
>> So if I understand you, you are saying export is not absolutely necessary given adequate uptake? If that's the case, again correct me if I'm off, any tank based on that system would (theoretically) eventually burst due to ever increasing biomass - if one is lucky enough for the uptake to be something other than algae.<<
Yes, eventually it would "burst" - see above comments and include the possibility of life and death scenarios. IME, corallines, substrates, coral skeleton, and animal and plant growth seem to be enough over long scales in tanks.
>> It seems many of our problems then are due to lack of herbivory - care to shed a little light for all of the recurring hair algae combatants out here? I suppose 99% of the battle is never having it in the first place (getting a foothold)...Seems like too delicate a balance for many to even have a chance with.<<
Turf and filamentous algae grow very quickly on reefs, but there is so much herbivory, you never see it. It takes up nutrients and sunlight, and then goes intot he growth and reproduction of herbivores..waste from them is eaten by worms and corals and sponges..by tiem you go through the whole chain, very little is - or should - be left. Any remaining excess seems able to be sequestered or accumulates at very low rates - but, this is my experience and/or what is possible, not necessarily or perhaps even likely to be what happens in other cases. I know that others achieve the same and better, so its far from impossible.
My lab tank, I am finding, is having a hard time with enough algae. I am feeding heavier and heavier and have snails, a blenny, nassarius, and Mithrax. I had to remove the Mithrax because it started eating coral tissue for lack of algae. I have increased an auto
feeder to 12 5-second bursts of Golden pearls a day (estimated about 1/16 teaspoon each) and adding phytoplankton and 3-4 cubes of frozen food a day - 55 gallon tank. I cannot get any filamentous algae growth to appear, even temprorarily until the snails find it, and I assume my herbivores are somewhat hungry.