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I suppose it is not funny for you but this ,makes me laugh every timeI'd have to run a bucket of tap water to wash my filter media as I'm not allowed to use the sink for things like that (I should never have used the word bacteria in front of my husband). So since I have buckets of nice warm tank water I use those.
Only in a low-bioload tank.Especially once established, there is far more beneficial bacteria in the tank, especially the SUBSTRATE, than in any filter. So you can clean filter sponges in tap water and never see a problem.
Nay nay... any tank. Hobbyists have been brain washed for years (that's right I said it!) by manufacturers that beneficial biology only lives in special bio-media in filters. It's marketing hype that's just not true. We've also been 'informed' that sponge material is only for mechanical filtration when in fact it's an excellent home for bacteria (not unlike the kitchen sponge - oh no!).Only in a low-bioload tank.
I agree, that's why sponge filters and undergravel filters are so excellent at bio-filtration.Nay nay... any tank. Hobbyists have been brain washed for years (that's right I said it!) by manufacturers that beneficial biology only lives in special bio-media in filters. It's marketing hype that's just not true. We've also been 'informed' that sponge material is only for mechanical filtration when in fact it's an excellent home for bacteria (not unlike the kitchen sponge - oh no!).
Now that's not to say there is little/no BB in the filter because there is - especially in the filter that's allowed to mature into a healthy colony - HOWEVER, the filter is not the only game in town....Have you heard that manufacturers rate bio-media on surface area? Consider the surface area on and in the substrate.
Believe it or not!
Nay nay... any tank.
Agree to disagree .... Again there is far more surface area for BB in the substrate than in any filter.If you keep big fish, you have thousands of times more bacteria, and most of them are in the filter. The amount in the tank is negligible.
This after you’ve said twice that it isn’t true “in any tank”.I would agree that in a tank with limited or no substrate, then with only slight exception, the filter is the only place for a BB colony.
It likely varies with the grain size of the sand. I believe that my pool filter sand is permeable up to 2" deep where finer sands may only be 1" deep or so. And this may be enhanced by the activity of tunneling Malaysian Trumpet Snails. Other beneficial biology can exist in deeper levels hence the success of deep sand. Consider the combined surface areas of even one inch of substrate in the aquarium compared to the bio-media in any filter. It makes you stop and think.I would think it would depend on what kind of substrate you are using. Sand or soil would have very little flow through and would think very little bacteria processing ammonia. No idea though really.
I would think that larger fish could or should have larger tanks with even more substrate making the bio-load to substrate somewhat relative with smaller fish in smaller tanks. In any case, it seems to me that the amount of beneficial biology in the established aquarium becomes relative to the bio-load and only a portion lives in filter media.Keep big fish with any substrate you like, and then remove the filter and watch them all die, then have a rethink.