There is no question that plenums work and work well. Much like DSBs, plenums have been imcorrectly blamed for tank crashes, when in reality it is typically the fault of the aquarist.
Agreed. However, there are MANY situations where the crash was caused by a DSB/plenum (or I should say a small problem became a big problem due to the DSB/plenum). Dr. Ron can't keep his sandbeds from causing problems, Lee Chin Eng couldn't, Walter Adey certainly can't.....look at one of his latest disasters.
If you squint real hard, you can see hippo tangs in addition to the yellow tangs, dead corals, and algae.
There is a slight but important correction to make to what mojo said. The reason that plenums work isn't due to waer being forced mechanically through the sand like that of an undergravel filter, its simply concentration gradients.
concentration gradients is pretty much the same thing as diffusion.
Lastly, due to active biological processes sandbeds (plenum or DSB) does NOT become a nutrient sink.
You might want to let Dr. Ron know this.
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Having a 60 gal remote DSB may work, some folks can pull it off. I suspect, however, in most cases these turn into
nutrient-sinks and will be problems in the long run.
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It really matters because that is why a sand bed works. The material once captured by the animals in the bed really never leaves the bed. It cycles over and over in the bed from one organism in close proximity to another until the energy in it is used up and
the material in it gets exported. The decoupling of these reactions allows the material to be liberated into the tank water where it will be food for, primarily cyanonbacteria, but other microalgae as well. [/B]--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
When asked about flow issues due to blowing sand
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As an example of the flow necessary to move materials out of an "Acropora" thicket in nature, the flow across such a region has been measured, In the volume of a 100 gallon tank, that amount of flow would be on the order of 50,000 gallons per hour....
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heres a good one on your will last forever quote
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The added feeding goes to maintain the DSB that would have been adequate if it were in the main tank. However, in this case, you have added more nutrients to the system and as the DSB is a finite system it becomes saturated and will not be able to export them adequately.
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when asked what kind of tank a dsb would support
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There is no magic number per gallon, but the actual number of fish per unit volume is pretty low.
Probably on the order of no more than 3 or 4 relatively small fish per hundred gallon volume. Similarly coral diversity and abundance is pretty low. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
but he does let us know its simple
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If the hobbyist can't maintain a DSB in the main tank, which is about as easy as falling off a log, they shouldn't really try to maintain one in remote tank, but should probably try to use some other sort of filtration.
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but then 4 days later
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It is interesting that people tend to think that all of this is supposed to be "simple" and "easy" to do. Most folks don't realize that a coral reef ecosystem is the most complicated ecosystem on the planet, and that the sand bed component to it is also complicated. The level of complication is here is orders of magnitude more than is found in any manmade object, structure, or construction.
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Personally, if I was culturing corals for reproduction I wouldn't use a sand bed.
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When asked how many detrivores to add to a DSB Ron says
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The maximum amount of the most you can maintain.
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but then 2 days later in the same thread
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In my advice I generally tell people to add as little as possible, as that is the cost effective way.
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Heres a little help for folks on what and how many kinds of critters you need
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A DSB needs around 200 species to function properly and most land-locked reefers can't get the diversity high enough with just the detritivore kits and seeding with "live sand". The "Southdown and Seed" method is quite common and I doubt many of these tanks ever reach the diversity level required to function as envisioned. A DSB can be handicapped right out of the gate by lack of diversity.
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