Thanks!The "live" rock will die in a fresh water environment. There is also lighting requirements necessary beyond the necessary water requirements to sustain live saltwater rock. IMO get some type of lava rock and let it develop naturally in the tank. This is the closest you'll get to live freshwater rock.
yea, i got some advice.....save yourself a TON of money, and either buy some Texas Holey Rock, or get some rocks from your local creek, lake or river and boil THOSE haha. I will NEVER pay for rocks for my aquarium.....too many out there and too easy to sterilize for freeThe water (H2O) will accept carbonates (CO3^2-) from the I'm assuming mostly calcium carbonate based base rock to produce (H3O+) molecules in the aquarium solution and increase acidity? I don't want to turn the tank into a can of 7 up so I'll dry them out maybe boil the rocks and use them sparingly. Any other ideas or suggestions?
Got anything that'll counteract the pH spike? I'm taking a chemistry course for the second time. I'll take it slowly and record water parameters as they change. Thanks for the reply.
What about in a Brackish tank? Is there a minimum salt requirement ppm that Live Rock and Live Sand need??The "live" rock will die in a fresh water environment. There is also lighting requirements necessary beyond the necessary water requirements to sustain live saltwater rock. IMO get some type of lava rock and let it develop naturally in the tank. This is the closest you'll get to live freshwater rock.
Can anyone identify the type of rock most commonly used as live rock? Any geology majors?