stu40
PRC
So I read somewhere that in an optimum set up, plants only remove a max of 5ppm Nitrate (Tom Barr?).
If one of the reasons for water changes is to remove nitrates,what happens in tanks that go unchanged for long periods of time, why does the nitrate level not build up?
Is it because the plants process/use/absorb large amounts of ammonia & nitrite,therefore removing them from the Nitrogen cycle.The bacteria colony then process what's left into nitrates.Some of which is also used by plants.
In these setups is it just that the weekly,nitrate rise is so small that it takes months to get to really significant levels (100ppm say).I don't know how much nitrate would be produced weekly, but even at say 5ppm and a starting level of 10ppm in the tap water it would take 18 weeks to reach 100ppm.
So i guess the knack is to balance your bioload with your plant mass to minimise nitrate production and prolong the time periods between water changes?
I'm not looking to use this an excuse for less maintenance, just trying to understand the underlying principal.
Am i missing something obvious?
If one of the reasons for water changes is to remove nitrates,what happens in tanks that go unchanged for long periods of time, why does the nitrate level not build up?
Is it because the plants process/use/absorb large amounts of ammonia & nitrite,therefore removing them from the Nitrogen cycle.The bacteria colony then process what's left into nitrates.Some of which is also used by plants.
In these setups is it just that the weekly,nitrate rise is so small that it takes months to get to really significant levels (100ppm say).I don't know how much nitrate would be produced weekly, but even at say 5ppm and a starting level of 10ppm in the tap water it would take 18 weeks to reach 100ppm.
So i guess the knack is to balance your bioload with your plant mass to minimise nitrate production and prolong the time periods between water changes?
I'm not looking to use this an excuse for less maintenance, just trying to understand the underlying principal.
Am i missing something obvious?