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Homemade Live Rock from Cement & Oyster Shells and cycling your new reef tank! 

ReefMan
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You can make your own live rocks with cement (CEM II type with limestone) and crushed oyster shells so that you can make the reef tank aquascape of your deams! By making your own, you can produce them in any shape or size, all exactly as you like - and at the same time limit your effect on wild reefs. Aquacultured live rock is another good option, where quarried dry rock (like MarcoRocks) is left in the ocean for several months and then sold.
What's CEM II Portland cement? Good question! I wasn't sure either - but it just means it's got up to 35% Limestone (or other things) in it. You want cement made with limestone. CEM I is just pure Portland cement. I'm sure it would probably work, but the additional limestone in the CEM II cement will likely help moderate your tank's pH a bit better (though it shouldn't leach much at all really once dry).
So what are the directions for making your own live rock from cement & oyster shell? Watch the video for all the details, but it's really not too hard. You can use whatever size crushed shells that you like visually, as they all worked in the experiments. The smaller the shell, the more dense your rock will be. You can get various size crushed oyster shell in bulk easily - it's used for all sorts of things including Bocce Ball courts.
Use a ratio in grams of 1 to 3.1 cement to crushed oyster shell. Figure out those amounts, and then use 50% of the weight of cement in water. The basic directions are...
- Rinse the shells to remove any dust
- Bleach the crushed shells with unscented household bleach for several hours
- Rinse them well in fresh water
- Maybe repeat the bleach and rinse process just in case
- Dry them completely (in the sun, or in an oven as in the paper)
- Mix the shells and water, they should be just wet
- Mix in the cement
- Form it into whatever shape you like using your hands or molds made from styrofoam
- Let it dry following the directions for the cement.
You can find the paper here with all the details and test results:
Relieving pressure from coral reefs: Artificial oyster rocks can replace reef rocks used for biological filtration in marine aquariums
Felipe P.A. Cohen, Ana Elisa Cabral, Ana Isabel Lillebø, Ricardo Calado
doi.org/10.101...
Abstract
Natural reef rocks have been harvested from the wild for decades to supply the marine aquarium trade. These rocks have been used in home aquariums mostly as substrate to safeguard biological filtration, especially for nitrification. Producing artificial rocks can be a sustainable alternative to the harvest of natural reef rocks from the wild, thus promoting coral reefs conservation. Nonetheless, there is a lack of scientific knowledge on standard formula to prepare artificial rocks, as well as on their potential to promote nitrification. The use of oyster shells, a by-product from oysters’ aquaculture, appears as a promising ecological and economic approach to produce artificial live rocks. Thus, we aimed to develop a standard formula to produce artificial rocks made with oyster shells and test its potential use as a substrate for biological filtration in marine aquariums. For that, we prepared artificial oyster rocks with different sized fragments of oyster shells and compared their ability to promote nitrification of ammonium nitrogen with that of natural reef rocks and fragmented oyster shells. The formula was set at 1 g of dried cement (white Portland cement with limestone) per 3.1 g of dried oyster shell fragments. The volume of water used to prepare this mix was set as 50% of the cement weigh. Our results indicate that artificial rocks made with oyster shells and cement display an ability to promote nitrification similar to that of natural reef rocks, promoting a slight decrease in pH and without releasing PO4-P. All treatments with substrate were able to oxidize up to 21 mg.L−1 of TAN (total ammonia nitrogen, initially added in the form of NH4Cl) within a 48-h interval. In other words, it is possible to safely assume that all tested substrates oxidized an average of ∼4.4 ± 0.1 μg of TAN.g−1.h−1. Thus, our results support that artificial rocks made with white Portland cement and oyster shell fragments are a sustainable option to safeguard a suitable biological filtration in marine aquariums.
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17 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 26   
@felipecohen6939
@felipecohen6939 2 года назад
Excellent video! I'm glad to see the science working along with the market and hobbyist needs. Thank you for spreading our research in a clear and captivating way
@seancolinclark
@seancolinclark 2 года назад
Taking "Live rock man" to another level.
@adrianoakirahino5313
@adrianoakirahino5313 Год назад
Very nice video! Thanks for sharing the information from this paper. Very helpful
@H2GoAquariumResource
@H2GoAquariumResource 6 месяцев назад
I live at the beach and so oyster shells are readily available. I'll definitely give this a go being i just can't find the shapes I need, not to mention the cost. Thanks for sharing!
@zaher.w
@zaher.w 2 года назад
Thanks 😊
@lkapitan8232
@lkapitan8232 2 года назад
Very interesting. Given the price of dry rock and man made rock, it is worth a try. Thanks.
@ReefMan
@ReefMan 2 года назад
Good luck! I’ll probably try this as well when I need rock, it’ll be nice to be able to make it in exactly the shape and size we need.
@MikiCab1
@MikiCab1 Год назад
I got chickens so I got oyster shells. Maybe I will make some bio-Balls out of them.
@GwonkReefkeeping
@GwonkReefkeeping 2 года назад
Good video. I have been considering making my own rock for a few years now. Being near the Chesapeake bay, I have easy access to loads of oyster shells. Thanks for your research.👍🏾
@ReefMan
@ReefMan 2 года назад
Good luck!! It seems like it’d be simple enough to try, none of the ingredients are that hard to find it seems, or expensive. If it doesn’t work out, you’re just out a little money and some time
@rhombifer566
@rhombifer566 2 года назад
interesting 🤨
@ReefSwens
@ReefSwens 2 года назад
Awesome video. Thanks
@ReefMan
@ReefMan 2 года назад
Glad you liked it!!!
@PatrickJewellTheGreat
@PatrickJewellTheGreat 2 года назад
Ah yes, living in Louisiana will finally come to my advantage.
@danielroberts2888
@danielroberts2888 10 месяцев назад
Would using an oyster based diy live rock screw up a freshwater planted tank?
@garrycole9187
@garrycole9187 2 года назад
Is the rule of thumb about a reef tank needs to be a year old before adding sps true in your experience? I have a tank that is about 8 months old, parameters are spot on, .02 phos, 6-7 nitrate, 9.2 alk, 440 CA and 1400 Mg. Dosing ESV-bionic 2 part and mag plus Kalkwasser to keep ph about 8.2. I added some frags of hardier corals, stylo and 3 monti caps, couple of birdnest and a couple of pocillopora. They are not doing well with the exception of the pocilloporas. There is no amonia and these readings have been steady for a month. What do you think is the problem?
@stevegee8010
@stevegee8010 2 года назад
That should be 1kg per 10 litres. 1 Kg per 1 litre is 2.2lbs per 1/4 of a gallon.
@puliraja4801
@puliraja4801 4 месяца назад
yes. according to his calculation we should use 150 kg live rock in 40 gallon tank. the calculation was 15 kg to 40 gallon breeder tank
@hoodroad9585
@hoodroad9585 Год назад
Great Video I've been thinking about trying to make my own rocks but didn't know what or if any materials would be safe and just a FYI livestock feed stores sell crushed Oyster shell for hens
@rhombifer566
@rhombifer566 Год назад
🪨 interesting 🤔
@encrustingacro
@encrustingacro 2 года назад
I have a question. Is type 2 Portland cement the same as CEM 2 Portland cement?
@ReefMan
@ReefMan 2 года назад
Probably. I learned a lot about cement during this video though, so probably good to triple check just in case. I would think it'd be the same though. Keep in mind that CEM II just means that it has up to 35% "other stuff" added that's not portland cement - so you want to make sure that other stuff is limestone or something you actually want in your tank.
@encrustingacro
@encrustingacro 2 года назад
@@ReefMan Thanks. Also, I’ve always wondered how porous artificial live rock actually is. I have seen a picture of a real reef rock cut in half and it didn’t look like it had that many pores. However, pictures you showed of the artificial rocks they made in the experiment looked very porous. From what I know, mined marco rock is currently the most porous rock not mined from the reefs. I’m thinking maybe someone could cut open different brands of artificial/mined rocks to see how porous they actually are.
@ReefMan
@ReefMan 2 года назад
I suspect, but have no proof, that the micro pores in a lot of our rock are mostly full of crud pretty soon after we put them in. For sure, this oyster rock would have as much or more surface area, and I bet that’s good enough for most of us.
@SteveProp
@SteveProp 2 года назад
Type IL is about the US equivalent. The industry use of things like this is CO2 reduction. The overall difference shouldn’t be too much though, with Type IL you’re basically switching out ~25% of the Portland cement with lime, instead of the approx 5% that’s in the regular Portland Type I/II cement. If that 20% of cement is gonna do your tank in the rest of the cement in the regular stuff will too.
@nigelcox5029
@nigelcox5029 Год назад
I thought it was Bill Gates talking about reefing
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