waterdrop
Enthusiastic "Re-Beginner"
Neale,
"Saprotrophic bacteria" is a new term to me, different from the familiar "Heterotrophic" and "Autotrophic (or the longer, more specific Chemolithoautotrophic also used for our two nitrifying species)" so I've been taking a look at some soil science articles in the scientific literature since reading your post up there, in an effort to educate myself a tiny bit. About the best one I found, by the way, is an article by Hogberg and Read called "Towards a more plant physiological perspective on soil ecology" in "Trends in Ecology & Evolution" Volume 21, Issue 10, October 2006, Pages 548-554 (for those of you also hunting for material.)
At this point I can't tell whether saprotrophic is simply a different name, basically, for the bacteria we've been (here in the "New to the Hobby" forum anyway) collectively labeling as the "heterotrophs" (of course meaning they consume organic material rather than inorganic, like the autotrophs) which we've understood to be composed of any number of unspecified species that typically remain more waterborn than the autotrophs and are the primary means by which fish waste, excess fishfood, plant debris and other organics are broken back down into ammonia. We also know them as the primary constituents of milky white bacterial blooms. Do you have any insight into whether the term "saprotrophic" you've used refers to the same species we've used the "heterotrophic" term for, or perhaps already know this to be a *different* category of aquarium bacteria that we should know about and understand.
Excuse all the writing here but I'm quite surprised not to have come across this term in my two years here and my exploration of Hovanec's three articles on the autotrophs and numerous articles since those that OM47 and I have periodically looked at in the waste water treatment plant scientific literature. (Perhaps I've missed some coverage of this in the Scientific subforum as I've not had time to keep up with that one.. OM, please tip me off if that's the case.)
I've never had reason, so far, to think of the waterborn heterotrophs to be a bacteria that we need to "develop." My understanding was that these were so completely ubiquitous in non-chlorinated, air-exposed water systems like aquaria that no special effort was ever put forth in quantifying or encouraging them per se. They are simply expected to be present in large numbers, both in a just-filled, dechlored tank and later in an operational, cycled tank.
WD ( so much more to say, so little time, sigh)
"Saprotrophic bacteria" is a new term to me, different from the familiar "Heterotrophic" and "Autotrophic (or the longer, more specific Chemolithoautotrophic also used for our two nitrifying species)" so I've been taking a look at some soil science articles in the scientific literature since reading your post up there, in an effort to educate myself a tiny bit. About the best one I found, by the way, is an article by Hogberg and Read called "Towards a more plant physiological perspective on soil ecology" in "Trends in Ecology & Evolution" Volume 21, Issue 10, October 2006, Pages 548-554 (for those of you also hunting for material.)
At this point I can't tell whether saprotrophic is simply a different name, basically, for the bacteria we've been (here in the "New to the Hobby" forum anyway) collectively labeling as the "heterotrophs" (of course meaning they consume organic material rather than inorganic, like the autotrophs) which we've understood to be composed of any number of unspecified species that typically remain more waterborn than the autotrophs and are the primary means by which fish waste, excess fishfood, plant debris and other organics are broken back down into ammonia. We also know them as the primary constituents of milky white bacterial blooms. Do you have any insight into whether the term "saprotrophic" you've used refers to the same species we've used the "heterotrophic" term for, or perhaps already know this to be a *different* category of aquarium bacteria that we should know about and understand.
Excuse all the writing here but I'm quite surprised not to have come across this term in my two years here and my exploration of Hovanec's three articles on the autotrophs and numerous articles since those that OM47 and I have periodically looked at in the waste water treatment plant scientific literature. (Perhaps I've missed some coverage of this in the Scientific subforum as I've not had time to keep up with that one.. OM, please tip me off if that's the case.)
I've never had reason, so far, to think of the waterborn heterotrophs to be a bacteria that we need to "develop." My understanding was that these were so completely ubiquitous in non-chlorinated, air-exposed water systems like aquaria that no special effort was ever put forth in quantifying or encouraging them per se. They are simply expected to be present in large numbers, both in a just-filled, dechlored tank and later in an operational, cycled tank.
WD ( so much more to say, so little time, sigh)