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magnesium in relation to RTN

I am not an expert, but you need to get Magnesium in line to stabilize both Calc & Alk. Mag should be about 3 times your calcium, so in your case, ~1300PPM.
 
At 1050 I would doubt it.
 
I am not an expert, but you need to get Magnesium in line to stabilize both Calc & Alk. Mag should be about 3 times your calcium, so in your case, ~1300PPM.

+1 , Magnesium is what helps calcium and alkalinity "bond" with anything . in other words if it is off it MAY cause problems . craig bingman talked about it at one of our meetings its a buffers helper as he described But as stated above there is not a lot of scientific evidence of it
 
Mag helps slow calcium from bouncing into alk and percepitating out of your water. Also some corals use it a lot and others not so much.
Like stated above it's always good to keep your mag around 3 times your Cal but shouldn't cause stn or Rtn unless the swing is dramatic and fast.
Are you testing regularly and are you getting large swings in parameters?
 
There are actually quite a few studies on Magnesium's role in coral growth.
Magnesium is known to play a crucial role in regulating the formation of different calcium carbonate phases
[Davis et al., 2000; Raz et al., 2000].
But Magnesium is only accounted for less than 2% by weight in coral skeleton, some as low as 0.1%.
It means Magnesium is not being consumed as fast as calcium despite its concentration in natural sea water is three times higher than Calcium.
So Magnesium is acting more like a regulator in addition to a minor participant in coral skeleton formation.
 
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