-
Live food for corals and other bacterivores; rich in protein, carotenoids and vitamins.
-
Removes ammonia, nitrite and phosphate (assimilation). Removes nitrate (denitrification).
-
Consumes organic waste (both dissolved and particulate); especially effective at breaking down detritus due to its ability to degrade cellulose.
-
Naturally inhabits both freshwater and saltwater environments (intended for use in both).
-
Produces plant growth hormones (IAA and ALA).
-
Selectively consumed by corals; actively seeks out corals for colonization.
-
Lives inside the coral where it carries out symbiotic interactions with zooxanthellae.
-
Intended for regular use as part of feeding/maintenance regimen. Great for establishing bacteria due to "old tank syndrome"or reestablishing bacteria after medicating.
-
Proven probiotic; can be soaked in herbivore fish food to help break down cellulose in fish gut.
-
Known to compete aggressively with pathogens such as Vibrio.
-
Can outcompete algae and cyanobacteria through competition for space and nutrients.
-
The closest thing to real marine snow in the aquarium industry.
-
Contains a chitin-based substrate that is fermented with live purple non-sulfur bacteria and then preserved via flash pasteurization.
-
Organics bonded with bacteria, offering a just slightly heavier than neutrally buoyant food for corals and other suspension-feeders.
-
Loaded with protein, polysaccharides and vitamin B, it promotes rapid growth and recovery in a broad range of corals and filter feeding invertebrates.
-
Features a broad range of particle sizes range from miniscule (e.g. individual deactivated microbial cells) to large (e.g. aggregated clumps of substrate and flocculant).
-
Excellent delivery system of dietary vitamin B12 where dosing of B12 as a supplement alone cannot be simply absorbed.