csababubbles
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2007
- Messages
- 661
I set-up a 30 gallon tank in September. The tank houses a spawning pair of mundoon blennies, 4 sexy shrimp, and two snails. The tank has no live rock, no sand, only a realistic-looking ceramic cave structure. There is no skimmer, only a heater, tunze nano powerheads and a surface overflow. The only natural thing I have added to this tank is a ball of cheato that I took from another of my established tanks. I'm sure the cheato had lots of pods, microstars, and algae spores and such with it so that introduced some life to the tank.
Nitrates are at 0. That's right, no live rock, no sandbed, no skimmer, no macro algae harvesting, no fuge, just flow and algae. I think this may very well prove that live rock and sand are not need for denitrification. The nitrates have to be going somewhere. Only thing I could think of is that there must be some sort of really thin layer of bacteria over every surface area of the tank that is making use of this energy. The algae (both micro and macro) should also be using it up and converting it. But the main point is that there is a constant input of food from me and this waste has to be going somewhere because I am not exporting anything and I am only doing 20% water changes once a month and according to my calculations that should not be having any sort of significant effect on the system.
Aside from the introduction of natural fauna to our systems (which could be accomplished in much better, efficient, and inexpensive ways), I don't see the big advantages of using live rock and sand, aside from aesthetics.
I can't be the first person to run a reef tank long term without sand and live rock, so am I missing something in my experiment or overlooking something?
Nitrates are at 0. That's right, no live rock, no sandbed, no skimmer, no macro algae harvesting, no fuge, just flow and algae. I think this may very well prove that live rock and sand are not need for denitrification. The nitrates have to be going somewhere. Only thing I could think of is that there must be some sort of really thin layer of bacteria over every surface area of the tank that is making use of this energy. The algae (both micro and macro) should also be using it up and converting it. But the main point is that there is a constant input of food from me and this waste has to be going somewhere because I am not exporting anything and I am only doing 20% water changes once a month and according to my calculations that should not be having any sort of significant effect on the system.
Aside from the introduction of natural fauna to our systems (which could be accomplished in much better, efficient, and inexpensive ways), I don't see the big advantages of using live rock and sand, aside from aesthetics.
I can't be the first person to run a reef tank long term without sand and live rock, so am I missing something in my experiment or overlooking something?
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