TwoTankAmin
Fish Connoisseur
What we call a filter does not filter anything, it is a machine that moves water and which houses media which in turn provides a home for the microorganisms which are actually the filter.
So to have a better filter one basically needs bigger and/or better quality media. My best filters are my Hamburg Matten filters. I power these mostly with air but I have also used small pumps as well. I get denitrification in my large foam filters. I use high quality, semi-rigid porosity controlled foam. This can also be used as filter media in almost any filter made. I even have one of my 3 canisters filled with only this foam. I have 3 identical canisters and the one with the quality foam needs to be cleaned about once every 3 - 4 years. I clean the other two with more conventional media (noodles, bio-media and floss) every 6 months.
It took me a number of years in the hobby to come to learning how filtration actually works. So what is it our filters actually do? Whether one has a hang-on, an internal, a canister , a sump etc. they all do the same things:
1. Circulate water.
2. Hold media.
3. Provide some incidental heating due to the motor.
The hardest thing for me to understand was about what we call mechanical filtration and media. What exactly does mechanical media remove? Most people will answer solid waste. But what exactly is solid waste? For the most part is is actually organic particles. And in nature these particles are food. Most "mechanical waste: in nature is actually consumed not trapped and thrown out. Bigger creatures eat bigger particles which become smaller and get eaten by even smaller creatures. In some case one creatures wase output is another creature's food. This is how the nitrogen cycle works.
Organics waste gets turned into ammonia which is consumed by bacteria or Archaea which in turn makes nitrite then cunsumed by other microorganisms and the result of that is nitrate. Under proper conditions this can be turned back into nitrogen by other microorganisms or consumed by bigger things like plants or algae etc.
All filters in our hobby have trade-offs. The most obvious one is size- the smaller a filter, the less media it can hold. However, the choice of media matters. Porosity and durability matter. The next consideration is actually one about which we rarely think and that is oxygenation. The nitrifiers are aerobic and need oxygen to function. However, the denitrifiers need the opposite, no oxygen. Most filtration only provides minimal denitrification, so in FW tanks we change water a lot in most cases to deal with nitrate.
All of the above factors into how effective any filtration might be. Oxygen is often the key. Out fish etc. all need to have adequate dissoled oxygen (DO) in the water to survive and to thrive. This also applies to the microorganisms doing the actual filtration. So let's consider DO.
The most common way DO levels are maintained in water is from the surface being agitated. This promotes the natural exchange of gasses between the water and the atmosphere. Most filtration devices will only get the amount of Oxygen which is already dissolve in the intake water. On the other hand, hang on filters are exposed to the air and can add some oxygen beyond what is in the intake water. Canisters (among other filters) cannot do this And this is the one potential drawback of them.
One of the benefits of a canister is its size. But this can also be a drawback when it comes to inadequate DO in the intake water. Insufficient oxygen means that less bacteria can survive. What this means is that we need to be sure the DO levels in our tanks ae adequate. This is one of the advantages of a sump. It is open to the air and as the water moves through the sump it is able to add oxygen. The same is true for hang on filters.
Of course one of the best filters we can have is a planted tanks where the plants are rooted in a decent depth of substrate. The plants eat ammonia (as ammonium) they do not create nitrite or nitrate, in fact they may consume nitrate. They also host nitrifying organisms on their surfaces. Some plant even transport oxygen down to their roots which are often in anaerobic zones. They release the O which makes it possible for nitrifiers to colonize and go to work. This in turn fosters nearby zones where denitrifiers colonize and consume the nitrate then being created.
If all of this is something that interests you, have a read here: Aquarium Biofiltration And for plants fostering nitrifying and denitrifying bacteria, have a read here Aquatic Plants and the Nitrogen Cycle
edited to fix typos
So to have a better filter one basically needs bigger and/or better quality media. My best filters are my Hamburg Matten filters. I power these mostly with air but I have also used small pumps as well. I get denitrification in my large foam filters. I use high quality, semi-rigid porosity controlled foam. This can also be used as filter media in almost any filter made. I even have one of my 3 canisters filled with only this foam. I have 3 identical canisters and the one with the quality foam needs to be cleaned about once every 3 - 4 years. I clean the other two with more conventional media (noodles, bio-media and floss) every 6 months.
It took me a number of years in the hobby to come to learning how filtration actually works. So what is it our filters actually do? Whether one has a hang-on, an internal, a canister , a sump etc. they all do the same things:
1. Circulate water.
2. Hold media.
3. Provide some incidental heating due to the motor.
The hardest thing for me to understand was about what we call mechanical filtration and media. What exactly does mechanical media remove? Most people will answer solid waste. But what exactly is solid waste? For the most part is is actually organic particles. And in nature these particles are food. Most "mechanical waste: in nature is actually consumed not trapped and thrown out. Bigger creatures eat bigger particles which become smaller and get eaten by even smaller creatures. In some case one creatures wase output is another creature's food. This is how the nitrogen cycle works.
Organics waste gets turned into ammonia which is consumed by bacteria or Archaea which in turn makes nitrite then cunsumed by other microorganisms and the result of that is nitrate. Under proper conditions this can be turned back into nitrogen by other microorganisms or consumed by bigger things like plants or algae etc.
All filters in our hobby have trade-offs. The most obvious one is size- the smaller a filter, the less media it can hold. However, the choice of media matters. Porosity and durability matter. The next consideration is actually one about which we rarely think and that is oxygenation. The nitrifiers are aerobic and need oxygen to function. However, the denitrifiers need the opposite, no oxygen. Most filtration only provides minimal denitrification, so in FW tanks we change water a lot in most cases to deal with nitrate.
All of the above factors into how effective any filtration might be. Oxygen is often the key. Out fish etc. all need to have adequate dissoled oxygen (DO) in the water to survive and to thrive. This also applies to the microorganisms doing the actual filtration. So let's consider DO.
The most common way DO levels are maintained in water is from the surface being agitated. This promotes the natural exchange of gasses between the water and the atmosphere. Most filtration devices will only get the amount of Oxygen which is already dissolve in the intake water. On the other hand, hang on filters are exposed to the air and can add some oxygen beyond what is in the intake water. Canisters (among other filters) cannot do this And this is the one potential drawback of them.
One of the benefits of a canister is its size. But this can also be a drawback when it comes to inadequate DO in the intake water. Insufficient oxygen means that less bacteria can survive. What this means is that we need to be sure the DO levels in our tanks ae adequate. This is one of the advantages of a sump. It is open to the air and as the water moves through the sump it is able to add oxygen. The same is true for hang on filters.
Of course one of the best filters we can have is a planted tanks where the plants are rooted in a decent depth of substrate. The plants eat ammonia (as ammonium) they do not create nitrite or nitrate, in fact they may consume nitrate. They also host nitrifying organisms on their surfaces. Some plant even transport oxygen down to their roots which are often in anaerobic zones. They release the O which makes it possible for nitrifiers to colonize and go to work. This in turn fosters nearby zones where denitrifiers colonize and consume the nitrate then being created.
If all of this is something that interests you, have a read here: Aquarium Biofiltration And for plants fostering nitrifying and denitrifying bacteria, have a read here Aquatic Plants and the Nitrogen Cycle
edited to fix typos
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