Bruce Leyland-Jones
Fish Aficionado
Our water usually makes a serious journey from source to tap and, apparently, every point is open to bacterial contamination. It is also accepted that bacteria are increasingly resilient to antibiotics and other treatments, so chlorine/chloramine is used to kill any bacteria.
Not just bruise it, bash it about, or give it a good telling off, but to kill it.
Stone dead.
I'd then struggle to understand how this treatment would not kill a portion of our beneficial bacteria and I would need to see valid scientific evidence that it does not, before I subject my own BB to unconditioned tap water.
I'd also be aware that our tap water still contains contaminants other than bacteria, such as heavy metals and so on. Rinsing filter sponges in unconditioned tap water would contaminate them in these trace elements, (which would accumulate over time), whereas this wouldn't become an issue when washing the filter in already-treated aquarium waters.
Not just bruise it, bash it about, or give it a good telling off, but to kill it.
Stone dead.
I'd then struggle to understand how this treatment would not kill a portion of our beneficial bacteria and I would need to see valid scientific evidence that it does not, before I subject my own BB to unconditioned tap water.
I'd also be aware that our tap water still contains contaminants other than bacteria, such as heavy metals and so on. Rinsing filter sponges in unconditioned tap water would contaminate them in these trace elements, (which would accumulate over time), whereas this wouldn't become an issue when washing the filter in already-treated aquarium waters.