Wrong. Water is fresh when it's free of all contaminants whether it's from evaporation/condensing or filtered through fine membranes (RO-RO/DI). So setting aside air pollution (e.g. acid rain) rain water is pure and is further filtered through the soil and obtains necessary minerals. Aerating polluted water does not make it more pure.
Minerals are NOT contaminants but building blocks for life as all plants and fish need minerals.
Wrong again. Pollutants not removed by plants as nutrients and that we can't test for build up to toxic levels if left unchecked.
Experts agree that anubias and java fern are very slow growers and do little to remove ammonia/nitrates from the aquarium. I have tanks with slow growing anubias and java ferns that seem to do little for lower nitrates. I find that fast growing water sprite is way more effective.
Father Fish is a proponent of sand over mud (aka dirt tank) but if you watch more videos you'd see that he has an extensive automated water change system with huge vats of pre-treated water out back.
Cory McElroy (Aquarium Co-Op) did feature a store in one video that had heavily planted tanks and didn't do conventional partial water changes. However, they sell fish out of those tanks so a significant amount of water is routinely removed and later topped off with fresh water... a pseudo water change!
Every couple of months someone comes along to challenge routine periodic partial water changes. Even with claims of low or no nitrates. They claim that their fish are fine, some even breeding and they live an 'average amount of time'. Sadly their average usually isn't the 10-15 years most fish could live if properly cared for. These armchair hobbyists tend not to come back and report that their tank crashed.
Believe what you will but I have learned that the only way to maintain a stable water chemistry is with routine partial water changes to replace polluted water with fresh water and replenish necessary minerals.
Well, whether I am wrong again or not is debatable:
I'll repeat:
You cannot have stagnant or stale water if your water is aerated:
"
Stagnant water has little dissolved oxygen in it and is a prime breeding ground for bacteria. Pools of water, such as those sitting in the back of an infrequently flushed toilet tank, become stagnant as the oxygen works its way out of the water and is not replaced. The only way to prevent water from becoming stagnant is to aerate it. This can be accomplished through good water circulation."
Stagnant water is breeding ground for harmful bacteria, viruses and dying beneficial microorganisms.
The water you replace with 'fresh' water is actually still fresh water. Unless you added so much salts and minerals in it that you turned it into 'mineral/salt' water.
"
Fresh water (or
freshwater) is any naturally occurring
water containing low
concentrations of dissolved
salts and other
total dissolved solids. Though the term specifically excludes
seawater and
brackish water, it does include non-salty mineral-rich waters such as
chalybeate springs. Fresh water may include water in
ice sheets,
ice caps,
glaciers,
icebergs,
bogs,
ponds,
lakes,
rainfall,
rivers,
streams, and
groundwater contained in underground
aquifers."
Pure uncontaminated water is:
"Water is a compound made up of hydrogen and oxygen, so
pure water would be
water that contains nothing but hydrogen and oxygen."
Therefore: anything other than hydrogen and oxygen is water contaminant.
Potable water:
"Potable water is not
pure water because it almost always contains dissolved impurities. For
water to be
potable, it must have sufficiently low levels of dissolved salts and microbes"
Polluted water:
- Chemical pollution. The most common type of water pollution, chemicals can infiltrate both underground water sources and those sitting on the Earth's surface. ...
- Groundwater pollution. ...
- Microbiological pollution. ...
- Nutrient pollution. ...
- Oxygen-depletion pollution. ...
- Surface water pollution.
So you are talking about polluted water not pure water. And generalising mineral content of water; as I previously stated: I have to ADD minerals to my 'fresh' water because it doesn't have much in there to begin with. So changing water to replace minerals would be counterproductive in my case.
I did watch Father Fish video and he said:
"I have glass lid on top of
this aquarium and had very little evaporation over the years. This tank
only had small top ups since 1998. I use tap water. Do not use RO water. Do not use rain water...."
Experts agree? I haven't seen anyone that is expert or agree on anything regarding Anubias other than general consensus that they are slow growing. There is no study, no experiment, no nothing to say how much Nitrates they remove.
Water Sprite far more effective?
Probably, I'll take your word for it. I have no idea. I have Anubias/Java Fern and doing experiment to see if they are responsible for lack of Nitrates in my tank or is there another factor.
Challenging water change ritual?
I don't care about your water change ritual. I never stated I don't believe in water change.
In fact I repeatedly stated in this thread:
1. This thread is about unusual Nitrate readings in my tank NOT about water change
2. The reason I'm not changing water is because I want to do experiment to see if Anubias/Java Fern are responsible
3. I'll have to do water changes in my set-up regardless of Nitrates as I have to remove fish poo anyway.
4. I have no interest in making water changeless set up.
Why on Earth do you and another poster or 2 insist on bringing up water change and insisting on arguing about it, well that's the question only you can answer.
The only reason I'm arguing with you is because I'm little bit annoyed with people going on and on about water change 'challenge' issue that I don't care about other than passing interest and curiosity.