How Important is Water Quality?


Nothing will insure your success as much as the quality of your water! One of the most important elements of an enclosed reef system is the water. With human beings, clean fresh air is necessary for good health; in a reef tank, the water is the vital component.

The water you use will have the greatest effect on the success or failure of your reef tank Do not make the mistake of assuming your tap water is suitable. Most likely it is not. Many a novice reef aquarist has paid dearly for overlooking the composition of plain tap water.

USING PLAIN TAP WATER

The first approach is to try to use your tap water, just as it comes out of the faucet. This seems like the easiest way, but it has the most potential problems. If you insist on using your tap water, I would strongly suggest that you have it tested in a laboratory. You will find such laboratories listed in the Yellow Pages. The tests cost about $10 each. You want the lab to test for phosphate and silicate (algae producers), nitrate, lead, and copper. So you need five tests @ $10, which is $50. Even if the readings are low, you cannot be absolutely sure the water won’t cause problems at some point. However, you may get extremely lucky and be able to use your tap water.

Average tap water will usually induce micro-algae If you take this approach, there will be only one way to know whether it is satisfactory: once you have the tank set up and you have done the initial cycling process, if you don’t have a persistent algae problem and your livestock seems to be thriving, then you may assume the water is okay. I would not recommend this approach, as you may risk stressing or even killing the delicate and valuable specimens you have purchased. This may seem like the easiest and cheapest way to go, but I have found out that it is not.

The best approach is to use purified tap water. I have found this has been the most convenient, least expensive method to get top-quality water when and where you need it. This is a primary requirement of the reef.

What You Will Need

Keep in mind that you cannot afford to cut corners in this area of your system. As stated from the beginning, nothing will ensure your success as much as the quality of your water.

Let me describe my system. First, it is necessary to have a cold water supply from your home, preferably near by the tank. In my setup, the tank is about 8 feet from a sink. I purchased a 3-way tap to tie into the cold water pipe, connected a piece of 1/2” plastic water pipe, and ran that next to the tank with a plastic garden hose type spigot.

Having a water supply at the tank is convenient and practical Now I have a water supply right at the tank, with a shutoff, which is ideal. This is extremely helpful when you do water changes and when adding the make-up water, which will be done frequently. I prefer not to have to wrestle with messy and inconvenient buckets and containers full of water.

To the male spigot I connect a length of garden hose, approximately 36”, with a female end to it. This is connected in series to a single-stage carbon prefilter, then to a dual-stage carbon filter, and finally to a deionizer, which has a 36” length of vinyl tubing for the outlet. The result is pure triple-carbon-filtered, deionized water. My make-up water system is located on the side of the tank, where I mix the water for bimonthly water changes and the make-up water for evaporation.

A Reverse Osmosis Unit:

The advantage:

The disadvantages:

A Deionizer:

The deionizer is a much simpler design than the R.O. unit. It operates on a one-stage principle, using a container filled with a resin material that removes contaminants. I find that the quality of water it produces is perfectly acceptable for my reef.

The advantages: