Flatlander
Well-known member
Mike, whatever became of the published report Charles was bringing forth on his plenum study? Still in the works?
Naw in a DSB its always in a state of flux. No square inch is the same in either enviroment or in food input. I agree with you on the food input controling the population. You can equate the population flux by just birth and death, thier is so vastly more at work here. Your not taking into concederation the biofilms, the enzymes, the microbes and so on, thier mass alone is more then the bacterial mass. thats alot of stuff that doesnt get eaten or broken down????What i do belive is happening (empirically) is that the bacteria populations are reaching some point of equilibium at which time the population is stable. As many are being born as dying. Due to ecological facts no populations of organisms can exceed their food supply (common sense too!)
LOL now who is baffling the BS, hehehe. A dsb can not process a considerable amount of organics. it is very limited to what it can actually handle, another reason they load up quick. Even Ron say only 2 to 3 small fish per 100 gallon tank and 3 to 4 corals. that not alot brother. On a BB tank it can handle as much organic load as you put in base on how efficiently you remove it.The deep san bed can process a considerable amount of introduced organics (organisms both dead and alive. This can make an ideal environment for LPS, soft coral, and filter-feeders that absorb organics from the water column.
How come no one here extolls the use of the ultimate biological filter, the one that actually does this work in the wild? Prolifera is renown for removing 98% of the "bad nitrate" and razor is not far behind. Even the magnesium sucking Mangrove?
Stop thinking mechanical and look at the reef system in the wild and try emulating that! I believe the chemicals and stuff (which I will use in extreme cases) are all bad for a closed system. Got cyano, get fighting conch, got detritius in the sand bed? Get Nassarius, Sand Sifting Stars, and Cerith snails, and Sand Sifting Gobies. Fight nusiance with biology, your system will be more stable and your tank mates will thank you for it. Because these things don't go away. The chemical is a temporary fix, unless you want ot keep buying it and dealing with it.
And for those of you that mark this in red and nitpick everything I just said, MY TANK IS BIGGER THAN YOUR TANK! I have worked hard to find a formulae that will work for me and I try to go natural as often as I can, but occassionally things get out of hand, then as a last resort I use rowaphos or phosban. But never use any medications to cure a fish in your reef. If I can stress that enough, I would. "Let that durn fish die" has been the hardest lesson I have ever learned. No one fish is worth nuking your tank, and nothing, I say nothing, is absolutely reef safe. There will always be a cirumstance that will cause that STUPID "Reef Safe" stuff to nuke your tank. Grin and bear it.
WildReef said:Stop thinking mechanical and look at the reef system in the wild and try emulating that!
what do you do to filter the water prior to going down the tubes?It is run in reverse so you can filter the water before it goes under the gravel. Also I run it very slow, 50 gal/ hr down each tube. I do this because I want anerobic areas to develop between the grains of gravel. With this slow flow oxygen will be practically or totally depleted in many minute areas. These areas will be too small to produce hydrogen sulfide.
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