"This is a logging app for all types of saltwater coral reef or freshwater aquariums. Log as many tanks as you want along with livestock, equipment, parameters, maintenance, dosing etc. Link multiple photos to your aquarium, fish or coral and track growth."

Quickly calculate the volume and weight of your aquarium from its dimensions. Enter depth of sand substrate to quantify required weight of dry sand. Includes glass, water and substrate weights. Measure in centimetres or inches Results in kg, lbs, stone, ton, hundredweight and more.


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Aquarimate is a powerful app perfect for managing both saltwater and freshwater aquariums. The app costs $9.99 but comes equipped with an immense library, containing heaps of information on freshwater and saltwater fish. It has information on invertebrates, coral, and plant species, too. The app also packs a wide variety of tools such as tank parameters tracking and livestock tracking. It also includes task reminders, tank parameters, activity analysis with graphs, the ability to manage several aquariums, and advanced unit converters and dosing calculators.

Just like Aquarimate, Aquarium Manager also specializes in aquarium management, although its set of features is somewhat smaller compared to that of Aquarimate. The latter fact, of course, does not make it any less useful. It has everything an aquarist needs to maintain as many healthy aquariums as desired. With Aquarium Manager, you can effectively manage multiple aquariums, create to-do lists for various tasks and testing, and monitor water parameters in the test center to ensure ideal water parameters. Free, with in-app purchases.

Reef Tank Pro boasts a design as colorful as the flora and fauna of a coral reef and focuses on saltwater fish tank management. For only $2.99, you get an all-in-one aquarium app with which you can manage as many saltwater fish tanks as you like. You can track chemical levels, easily manage water changes with notifications and a countdown timer displayed on the home screen. The app also stores records of fish and coral you can spruce up with pictures and custom notes.

Is there such a thing as a phone app that measures aquarium light? I know that there are PAR meter apps to measure non aquarium light for houseplants-would that be somewhat accurate for aquarium light? Yes I know that monitoring plant growth/algae levels is the best way to gauge light. I just think I would be a helpful tool to have. I don't want one badly enough to pay $200 for one, though.....

Hi All,


First of all lumens and PAR are not the same. Lumens measure the degree of light (brightness) in the visual range of human beings. PAR (photoactive radiation) deals with the amount of light that hits a given surface in the range that plants can utilize. Our smartphones contain cameras with a sensor (CCD and CMOS) that measure brightness of the light entering the lens and adjust the aperture of the lens and/or the speed of the opening to achieve a good (hopefully) picture. While a sensor for a PAR meter measures the quantity of light entering the sensor.


That said, there are several apps out there for smartphones that portend to provide a PAR reading and to some degree they do but unfortunately they are not very accurate typically reading 15% to 20% higher than the actual PAR level. Keeping in mind that even PAR meters are +/-5% accurate then the phone app readings could be as much as 25% off. 



I have a 1 yo Samsung S20FE phone and an Apogee SQ510 PAR meter that was just returned from calibration at Apogee Instruments on 2/10/22 so I decided to see for myself. I downloaded the 'Light Sensor to PPFD' app and compared the readings in 'free air' (meaning not underwater) under 60 watt LED bulb. The reading of the PAR meter was 47 and the reading for the app on the phone was 54 so the app was 14.9% high.


I also had a extra LED reflector I could use so I measured the PAR in 'free air' with the Apogee PAR meter and the phone app. The PAR meter reading was 131 and the phone app reading was 150 so again the app read higher by about 15%. So my testing pretty much verifies the findings in the table above.


In conclusion if you would like to 'guesstimate' the PAR output level of your fixture using the app I used will give you an approximate reading that is 15% - 20% higher than the reading a PAR meter might give you. Remember that 'free air' readings will always be higher than the actual PAR readings taken under water due to light reflection at the surface, surface waves from filters, and the fact that water is not 100% clear.


Hope this helps! -Roy

Hi @OnlyGenusCaps


You have some very good plant folks in your club. I met one at the AGA Convention in Seattle in 2019 and several on the various plant forums that i belong to. 


Our webmaster created a page in the 'Members Only' portion of our website where members can read and sign a responsibly / disclosure form . When the fields are filled out and the member clicks 'agree' the website that sends the keeper of the PAR meter (me) an e-mail with sign up form. The form contains the member information. 


When I receive a form I advise the member that I have received it and add them to the waiting list (typically 2-3 weeks). When the meter is returned I check it out in front of the member to make sure it functions properly, then contact the next member on the list and arrange for them to receive the meter (either p/u at my house or meet a local aquarium shop). When I deliver the meter I show them how to use it so they know it is in working condition and have them sign the check-out form that was e-mailed by our website. A week later we make arrangements to return the meter. We are on our 2nd meter, the first one went into an aquarium and did not recover. Hope this helps! -Roy



I just wanted to share this cool little tool I've found! It's called Aquarium Note, a free app on the Google Play store. It's basically a digital journal for your aquariums. You can enter all the events, set reminders for yourself, et cetera. I found a bunch of cool tools on it. One of the more useful ones I've found are the graphs for your test results over time. It's got a place for pretty much any parameter you test. Another one that's great for a near color-blind guy like me is a color sensor for the liquid test kits. You just take a picture of your test tube next to the chart, move three selectors, and it tells you exactly what color it is. If you log items too, it gives you an expenditure list. (Yikes ). There's some other stuff too.

LED aquarium lights are brilliant, but all that blue (actinic) light can interfere with your camera sensor, changing the beautiful colors of your fish and corals into something out of a black light filled roller rink from the 1980's.

Finally, you don't need a pro camera rig and special lighting to get great and accurate shots of your aquarium. You don't need to spend hours in post-production tweaking the hue and lighting of your photos. Simply put, you just need the Aquarium Camera and an iPad or iPhone to get GREAT photos and videos of your aquarium.

We created the Aquarium Camera app because we were tired of seeing posts of brilliant aquariums on forums like Reef2Reef, Nano-Reef, ReefCentral that don't truly represent the health and beauty of the fish, plants and corals inside. It was fine in the days of VHO, Power Compacts and Metal Halide lighting, but with LEDs now taking over the aquarium lighting space, we needed another solution.

We spend so much time balancing our water chemistry and feeding our fish, plants, and corals to get the most out of their growth and color, yet in photos and video they take on a deep blue hue. It's frustrating. Posting to aquarium communities or aquarium log of photos and videos for how your aquarium has changed over time are ruined. We needed this app 3 years ago when we first started gluing our frags!

Let's commit ourselves to spending less time trying to correct the lighting on our aquarium photos and videos and more time enjoying our fish, shrimp, snails, plants, and corals... oh, and doing water changes.

Results will vary based on the shot because through software you can't completely remove the actinic light altogether #science. Depending on your LED light, the angle you shoot to the aquarium light and what's in frame, sometimes blue light hits the camera sensor and the photos still turn out blue-ish. Not as bad as using the normal camera app, but still annoying. SO, don't panic. You may have to play around with your focal point and angles. We've determined that this is pretty much unavoidable unless you get a polarizing or tinted lens for your device. e24fc04721

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