I have a 125 Gallon Fish Tank that's 20 months old. It's moderately planted with over 50 plants. Most of them 1 week new. Over the summer the heat wave kept my tank over 90 degrees and the 3 days without power injured my biological filter. One day I spend 6 hours changing the water adding the coolest water I had to get the temperature down. It hit 82, but over night it went back up into the nineties. Many of my plants died. The fish managed through it, but there was an algae bloom and I'm still working on it.
Before using the Pura Filtration Pad:
Ph 7.5
GH 120
KH 120
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 1
Nitrate 200
Phosphate 10
I did a lot of reading and found several sources that said an algae bloom can occur at phosphate levels over 5ppm. The sources are varied from institutions, water management persons, and even the EPA. SO I when on a furious hunt for a phosphate remover. I don;t like adding chemical to the fish tank and was looking for a filter media product. After finding on online, I search the local store and found one.
The product is Pura Filter Pad. It is a cut to fit media. The pad removes solids, organics, Ammonia, Phosphate, Medications, Lead, Copper and silicates from Aquarium water. It is intended for aquarium and pond use only. Use is simple and should be removed or replaced monthly. You can cut to fit, or fold to fit your external filter.
My 125g aquarium uses 2 HOB filters. 1 Whisper EX 70 and 1 Marineland 400. Together they have four independent slots to hold filtration media. There is also extra room for polishers other other media to customize you filtration preferences. The placement in my filter(s) was in front where the water passes through the filter pad just before entering back into the aquarium. The pad does decrease the water flow.
After running one cut to fit pad for 24 hours in one slot of the EX70:
Ph 7.5
GH 180
KH 80
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 1
Nitrate 200
Phosphate 5
After 48 hours:
Ph 7.5
GH 180
KH 100
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 1
Nitrate 200
Phosphate 2
I decided to add a 2nd filtration pad into the EX70 filter. I guess I should have kept using the single, but I am new to testing and it was what I had planned all along. For some reason after the great results I thought about the formula of filtering water. This is just an example. You have 1000 gallons of water and a filter that runs at 100 gallons per hour. In the 1st hour the 10% of the total water is filtered. In the second hour, 9% of the total water gets filtered. 100 gallons is still filtered, but 10% has already been filter. So after 2 hours, 190 gallons have been filtered. In the 3rd hour 100 gallons goes in and of that 8.1%~ get filtered for the first time. Eventally all 1000 gallons has gone through the filter 1 time. I just thought I would speed up the process and help get rid of the last 1.75ppm of phosphate.
The idea here is, based on how plants use nutrients. Phosphate inhibits a plants ability to use up nitrogen and other plant food and mineral. The plants efficiency begins to drop a 5ppm of phosphates. The ideal level of phosphate for plants is .25-1ppm. Plants also get into efficiency problems at 0ppm of phosphate.
So looking at my water, 200ppm of phosphate, there's a ton of food available and with the nutrient lock in the plant's ability to utilize the nitrates, I am hoping and kind of expecting that when the phosphate level reaches an ideal level, the plants in the tank will soak up the nitrates and the extra CO2 that the conditions are causing.
Also, the biological filter seems to mange all the ammonia, but isn't dealing with all the nitrites. As the product notes, it also filter's ammonia. So, if I decrease the ammonia, fewer nitrite will be created and should the nitrite level reach 0ppm, the nitrate level should start dropping in addition to what the plants use for food.
This test is not finished. It's in it's early stages and will be updated every 24 hours. From the results I have seen already, I recommend the Pura Filtration Pad for use in removing phosphate from aquarium water.
Before using the Pura Filtration Pad:
Ph 7.5
GH 120
KH 120
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 1
Nitrate 200
Phosphate 10
I did a lot of reading and found several sources that said an algae bloom can occur at phosphate levels over 5ppm. The sources are varied from institutions, water management persons, and even the EPA. SO I when on a furious hunt for a phosphate remover. I don;t like adding chemical to the fish tank and was looking for a filter media product. After finding on online, I search the local store and found one.
The product is Pura Filter Pad. It is a cut to fit media. The pad removes solids, organics, Ammonia, Phosphate, Medications, Lead, Copper and silicates from Aquarium water. It is intended for aquarium and pond use only. Use is simple and should be removed or replaced monthly. You can cut to fit, or fold to fit your external filter.
My 125g aquarium uses 2 HOB filters. 1 Whisper EX 70 and 1 Marineland 400. Together they have four independent slots to hold filtration media. There is also extra room for polishers other other media to customize you filtration preferences. The placement in my filter(s) was in front where the water passes through the filter pad just before entering back into the aquarium. The pad does decrease the water flow.
After running one cut to fit pad for 24 hours in one slot of the EX70:
Ph 7.5
GH 180
KH 80
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 1
Nitrate 200
Phosphate 5
After 48 hours:
Ph 7.5
GH 180
KH 100
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 1
Nitrate 200
Phosphate 2
I decided to add a 2nd filtration pad into the EX70 filter. I guess I should have kept using the single, but I am new to testing and it was what I had planned all along. For some reason after the great results I thought about the formula of filtering water. This is just an example. You have 1000 gallons of water and a filter that runs at 100 gallons per hour. In the 1st hour the 10% of the total water is filtered. In the second hour, 9% of the total water gets filtered. 100 gallons is still filtered, but 10% has already been filter. So after 2 hours, 190 gallons have been filtered. In the 3rd hour 100 gallons goes in and of that 8.1%~ get filtered for the first time. Eventally all 1000 gallons has gone through the filter 1 time. I just thought I would speed up the process and help get rid of the last 1.75ppm of phosphate.
The idea here is, based on how plants use nutrients. Phosphate inhibits a plants ability to use up nitrogen and other plant food and mineral. The plants efficiency begins to drop a 5ppm of phosphates. The ideal level of phosphate for plants is .25-1ppm. Plants also get into efficiency problems at 0ppm of phosphate.
So looking at my water, 200ppm of phosphate, there's a ton of food available and with the nutrient lock in the plant's ability to utilize the nitrates, I am hoping and kind of expecting that when the phosphate level reaches an ideal level, the plants in the tank will soak up the nitrates and the extra CO2 that the conditions are causing.
Also, the biological filter seems to mange all the ammonia, but isn't dealing with all the nitrites. As the product notes, it also filter's ammonia. So, if I decrease the ammonia, fewer nitrite will be created and should the nitrite level reach 0ppm, the nitrate level should start dropping in addition to what the plants use for food.
This test is not finished. It's in it's early stages and will be updated every 24 hours. From the results I have seen already, I recommend the Pura Filtration Pad for use in removing phosphate from aquarium water.