20 Ca Calcium

Calcium in the marine aquarium: role, ideal value, and correction

Major elements Reference: 420 mg/L

Calcium (Ca) is a fundamental macro-element in reef aquaria: the raw material for coral calcification (SPS/LPS), invertebrate shells and coralline algae. Aim for a practical range of 400–440 mg/L (target ~420–430 mg/L) at 35 ppt salinity to replicate natural seawater and ensure healthy growth. Ca stability goes hand-in-hand with alkalinity (KH) and magnesium (Mg). Zoanthus Balling helps offset daily consumption and precisely stabilise these parameters.

Fish-Only note: in a fish-only tank without calcifying corals, Ca demand is low; regular water changes with quality salt usually keep ~380–420 mg/L.

Key takeaways

  • Element: Calcium (Ca)
  • Family: Major elements
  • Reference value: 420 mg/L

Role and significance in the marine aquarium

Biological & chemical role

Together with carbonates, calcium forms calcium carbonate (CaCO3) — mainly as aragonite — building the skeleton of hard corals and many invertebrate shells. It also participates in cellular functions, growth of coralline algae, and the formation of a healthy calcareous biofilm on aquascape surfaces.

Reference values (reef)

  • Target range: 400–440 mg/L (operational target ~420–430 mg/L)
  • Reference salinity: 35 ppt (1.026–1.027 sg)
  • Typical demand: ~5–20 mg/L per week (depending on stocking and growth)

Measurement & accuracy

  • Colorimetric/titration kits: typical accuracy ~5–10 mg/L (calibrate salinity first).
  • ICP analysis: useful to validate and track mid-term trends.

Key interactions

  • KH (alkalinity): Ca & KH are consumed together by calcification; both high at once → abiotic precipitation risk.
  • Mg: stabilises the solution and delays CaCO3 precipitation. Low Mg makes raising Ca/KH difficult and favours scale deposits.
  • pH / CO2: too low pH slows calcification; too high pH with high Ca/KH favours precipitates (milky water, white deposits).
  • Salinity: ionic concentrations vary with salinity; correct to 35 ppt before interpreting.

Imbalance signs

  • Deficiency (low Ca): slow growth, dull tips, fragile skeletons; extended polyps and possible fading (e.g. Montipora, Stylophora “Milka”, Echinopora).
  • Excess (high Ca): milky water, hard white deposits on pumps/heaters, concurrent KH drop.

Supplementation — Zoanthus Balling

Zoanthus Balling relies on three complementary solutions: Calcium (calcium chloride), Alkalinity (bicarbonate) and “salt-free salt” (ionic rebalance). Once parameters are set to targets (Ca ~420–430 / KH ~7–9 / Mg ~1280–1350), Balling maintains stability with small daily doses, ideally via dosing pumps. It finely adapts to real tank demand and avoids parameter roller-coasters.

Balance table (guides)

ParameterReef targetRole/Note
Calcium (Ca) 400–440 mg/L (target ~420–430) Primary aragonite building block (coral skeleton).
KH (dKH) ~7–9 Provides CO32−/HCO3; pH stability.
Magnesium (Mg) ~1280–1350 mg/L Stabilises Ca/KH, limits precipitation.
pH ~8.1–8.4 (day) Avoids unwanted dissolution/precipitation.
Salinity 35 ppt Natural seawater reference.

Other methods (for general knowledge)

  • Calcium reactor (CaRx): dissolves calcareous media via CO2 (combined Ca+KH supply).
  • Limewater (kalkwasser): supports Ca/KH and higher pH via top-off water.

Understanding the chemistry of the element

Reactive, silver-white alkaline earth metal (Z = 20). Readily forms Ca²⁺; common salts include carbonates (CaCO₃ — aragonite/calcite), sulfates, phosphates, and chloride (CaCl₂). CaO and Ca(OH)₂ are strongly basic. Oxidises in air; reacts with water releasing H₂. Brick-red flame test. Abundant in sedimentary rocks; used as a reducing agent in metallurgy; cements and plasters.

What to do if the value is too low?

Goal

Raise gently towards 400–440 mg/L (target ~420–430) without exceeding +10 to +20 mg/L/day.

Action plan

  1. Verify salinity & test (35 ppt, valid kit).
  2. Check Mg: if <~1280 mg/L, correct magnesium first (stabilises Ca/KH).
  3. Supplement with Zoanthus Balling – Calcium:
    • Proceed in steps (morning/evening), re-test between steps.
    • Adapt the dose to the measured gap and real tank volume.
  4. Follow-up: test Ca daily at first, then 2–3×/week; afterwards maintain steady daily dosing via pumps.
  5. Avoid simultaneous strong corrections of Ca & KH to limit precipitation.
  6. Low demand (soft/FO): regular water changes may suffice.

Example calculation (guide)

Tank 200 L, Ca measured 380 → target 430 mg/L (= +50 mg/L). Split the correction into 2–5 steps (10–20 mg/L each) with Zoanthus Balling – Calcium, testing between steps.

What to do if the value is too high?

Goal

Return gradually to 400–440 mg/L (target ~420–430) without triggering precipitation.

Action plan

  1. Confirm reading: re-test Ca and check salinity (35 ppt).
  2. Pause calcium dosing: stop or reduce the Zoanthus Balling – Calcium solution (and reduce CaRx if used).
  3. Let the tank consume the excess; if the value is very high (>480–500 mg/L), perform fractional water changes (10–20 %) with a standard-Ca salt.
  4. Watch KH: correct any drop linked to concurrent precipitation.
  5. Clean white deposits on pumps/heaters if present.
  6. Prevention: resume Balling with re-calibrated doses once ~420–430 mg/L is reached, and avoid pushing Ca & KH too high simultaneously.

Thresholds

  • 460–480 mg/L: monitor, limit additions
  • >480–500 mg/L: actively correct (water change + pause dosing)

Why this element matters

Ensures growth of hard corals (aragonite skeleton formation) and coralline algae; contributes to reef ecosystem stability.

Origins and possible sources

Natural seawater ~420 mg/L ; reef recommendations 420–450 mg/L