Hi guys, I have a marine tank aswell as my trop tank. I have an ehiem pro 2 filter with bioballs and filter floss and rawaphos. All the levels are good in my tank. A little unauthodox I grant you, but it works for me
Emma
Emma
So that is a no then?Just like you, I personally cant see... ect. Some one is living up to their self assesment "bully"Do you have any science to back up this statement?....
I personally can't see any reasons for a nitrate factory.....
1) Used only bioballs and did not perfrom regular water changes
2) Used bioballs with live rock and didn't take any care to ensure the bioballs were maintained properly
every one I know (as long as they have high flow with those rocks I don't know anyone running bare bottom with any readings of nutrients.How many people successfully have zero nitrates when just using live rock on a normally stocked tank?
1) Used only bioballs and did not perfrom regular water changes
2) Used bioballs with live rock and didn't take any care to ensure the bioballs were maintained properly
Where are you getting this data from?
Then you don't know that many people on this forum. Look at how many people are having to use refugiums and water changes to keep nitrates down.every one I know (as long as they have high flow with those rocks I don't know anyone running bare bottom with any readings of nutrients.How many people successfully have zero nitrates when just using live rock on a normally stocked tank?
And your facts to back up your claims?
Bacterial flock is a mucus not tubes of air or water. It takes quite a bit of force to just blow off a big boogie
The simple answer is because (despite what many reefkeepers seem to think) not everyone wants a reef. If you want to keep a high bioload tank with sensitive fish then bioballs are great as they can process ammonia and nitrite quickly and cheaply, and will also leave a tank free of rock formations, and thus with room for fish like rays to swim in.The common consensus in this neck of the woods is: "if the above statement is true, why even use bioballs (or other such aerobic only media)?"
It seems like my first post has not been read??
It states why bio balls would produce nitrate in a form not readliy de-nitrated by the LR, i.e. into the free flowing water column, and not within the confines of a queing system within the rock. (see previous post)
Also the link I posted shows how flow around the rocks is independant to the flow through the rocks.
I know someone who took there external cannister filter off there reef tank and made no other changes and the nitrate dropped... and there does seem to be a reason for that, the queing theory..Previous post
But you do not explain the point that most of the nitrate will be created on the very outside of the live rock, where the best supply of food and oxygen will be.
I also can't see anything in Dr Shimek's article about nitrates queuing in the live rock waiting to get into the interior, all his article really discusses is quite how water gets in and out of the rock.
Could the drop in nitrates from the cannister filter removal be beacuase they didn't clean it out often enough and as such it had rotting material in it?
If you take the first 1/2 " into the rock as being rich in nutrient and oxygen, which is reasonable as LR has loads of holes easily big enough for oxygen and nutrient to get into, that's a huge surface area compared to what you can see on the surface. So most of the surface area is actually just inside the rock, or at all of the thousands of tunnels entrances.
I guess I didn't make that clear, the 'queing' theory is my idea of trying to qualify why nitrates in the water column are not assimiliated as quickly as nitrates created by the LR. (debatable I know)
I doubt that 1/2" into the rock will have anywhere near as much oxygen and nitrite as on the very surface of the rock, so most of the bacterial growth will be on the surface leading to most of the nitrates being released into the water.
How do you know that nitrates in the water column are not processed at the same rate as those that come from live rock? I still contend that most nitrates (if not all) that live rock produces will spend time in the water column as the bacteria are not going to be that discerning about where the nitrates leave the cell.