CuzzA
Wetwork for Hire
So, my buddy has created a reef for aquaculturing live rock for aquariums. He dumped a million pounds of quarried limestone rocks on to the site which was nothing but a barren sand desert.
It's now a thriving reef ecosystem growing coral, sponges, gorgs, tunicates, crabs, fish, you name it.
The process was typically pretty slow for new rock to acquire life at an acceptable rate for sale, usually a year or two, until this year we dumped 40,000 pounds of man made rock. The rock is produced in Fiji, by Walt Smith International. The rock attracted life at an amazing rate. It was ready for harvest in 6 months or less. Mind blowing. We wondered why. Well, we theorize it has to do with volcanic sand they are using to produce the rock. After all, that is what many islands and atolls are made from, volcanos.
So, if you want to create an artificial reef. Find some hard bottom at the correct depth where the proper amount of light will reach the coral and start dumping 10's of thousands of pounds of Walt's rock and sit back and wait. If you're impatient you could frag corals and epoxy them to the rock.
Before you know it, you'll have created a reef. It may even look natural in 20 years.
It's now a thriving reef ecosystem growing coral, sponges, gorgs, tunicates, crabs, fish, you name it.
The process was typically pretty slow for new rock to acquire life at an acceptable rate for sale, usually a year or two, until this year we dumped 40,000 pounds of man made rock. The rock is produced in Fiji, by Walt Smith International. The rock attracted life at an amazing rate. It was ready for harvest in 6 months or less. Mind blowing. We wondered why. Well, we theorize it has to do with volcanic sand they are using to produce the rock. After all, that is what many islands and atolls are made from, volcanos.
So, if you want to create an artificial reef. Find some hard bottom at the correct depth where the proper amount of light will reach the coral and start dumping 10's of thousands of pounds of Walt's rock and sit back and wait. If you're impatient you could frag corals and epoxy them to the rock.
Before you know it, you'll have created a reef. It may even look natural in 20 years.
