SCOOTERMAN, while I have been in this hobby for decades longer then others, I feel I have enough intelligence to experiment and then have an open discussion on this board to try and make sense of what I have observed. You seem to be dismissing me with your blanket statement that I should be doing more research but you should understand that I am well aware of the accepted practices and theories in this hobby. I am no way claiming I know everything but i think I am on to something significant here. You seem to be regurgitating everything that is "common knowledge" in this hobby. Well, that info I am proposing is wrong. Please take the time to read my responses in this thread. It seems to be flying in the face of what you are saying. But the proof seems to be right there. Is there not a sizable fish load in this tank without live rock and sand? Yes. Since there is a fish load that is being fed, ammonia will be produced right? Yes. Yet there is no ammonia, nitrite, or nitrate detectable in the aquarium, even if tested after the daily feeding. Something has to be going on that is causing the nitrates to be used up.
I also have another theory based on my experiments. Many people, including you, say that the live rock is good because once the surface bacteria convert the ammonia to nitrite and then nitrite to nitrate, the "bacteria deep in the pores" will be able to use this nitrate for energy and convert it to a nitrogen gas. And that the nitrate must be in close proximity to the oxygen deprived bacteria for them to be able to capture and use it. Well, here is what I think. The bacteria in the pores is not doing anything. The algaes and bacteria on the surface film are responsible for the denitrificiation. For example, one of my tanks runs a wet/dry filter along with 200 lbs of live rock in the display. Yet my nitrates are consistently tested under 5, despite a huge bioload and large feedings several times a day. But this is not supposed to happen! I am certainly not doing enough water changes (20% once a month on this tank) to have a major effect on nitrate reduction. Yet everyone claims that this system will result in high nitrates because the wet/dry creates them but then the nitrates are too far from the live rock for the bacteria to capture it. Well, if its too far for the live rock inner pore bacteria to capture it then something else must be using it, no? So there is denitrification in that tank that is not happening inside that rock, but somewhere else. So that's why I had the idea to setup a tank with fish but without live rock and sand to see if denitrification would still be occurring. And it appears to be!