It doesn't work that way man..... QUOTE]
Well, unless it does.
Well, thankfully it doesn't.
It certainly does in rain forests.
You honestly believe there are bugs and worms lying on the forest floor just waiting for a leaf to fall from the sky so they can feed??????
The forest floor does work like a DSB, but again, it does not work the way you believe it does.
The bugs and worms on the forest floor live in a giant smorgasbord we call leaf litter. They need not concern themselves with the leaf that falls today. Leaves fall every day, animals die every day, animals defecate every day, and all of this organic matter builds up on the forest floor. It can take months for the organic matter that fell to the forest floor today to completely rot away. This means the forest floor is holding months of accumulated rotting matter. These bugs and worms are feeding on the remains of the leaf that fell last week or several months ago. Rotting organic matter accumulates on the forest floor, just as it does in a DSB. Bugs and worms feed on this organic matter, but they can not stop the accumulation. In fact, their populations will be directly linked to the amount of accumulated organic matter. In areas where there is an abundance of rotting organic matter, there can be large numbers of reducers/bugs and worms. In areas where the accumulation is sparse, these organisms will also be sparse. This same effect takes place in DSBs, and virtually every other environment on the planet. In order to support large numbers of bugs and worms that feed on rotting organic matter, you must have large amounts of rotting organic matter to feed them.
It takes time for organic matter to break down. People are posting in this thread as if a worm eats a scrap of food, or piece of fish poo, and the story ends there. The scrap of food or fish poo is now gone because a tiny animal ate it. Well, again, that's not how it works. That tiny piece of food may be eaten and defecated many many times, by many many different organisms, before it is completely dissolved away and leaves the sand. This takes time. The elements in that piece of organic matter that fell into the sand today may be passed from organism to organism, and from organic to inorganic forms, many times before it eventually leaves the sand. All of this takes time. Throughout this time, new organic matter is constantly being added to the sediments and the process continues. The organisms living in a DSB can no more keep the sand clean and free of rotting organic matter than the organisms living on the forest floor can keep it clean and free of rotting organic matter. Rotting organic matter accumulates and builds up on the forest floor, in spite of all the tiny creatures that feed on it, just as rotting organic matter builds up in a DSB, despite all the tiny creatures that feed on it.
There are people, Bill being the most recent to post here, who have successfully kept deep sand beds for years without issue or major interventions. I dunno, maybe Bill and those others don't exist.
Have you been reading this thread at all???? We have gone over this many many times. The fact that Bill was able to keep animals alive in a system that contained a DSB proves nothing. Maybe it says something about his skills as a hobbyist, but it says nothing about how a DSB effects a tiny glass box full of delicate animals. There are many variables that can effect the success or failure of a marine aquarium. We can not choose one aspect of Bill's system, like the DSB, and say that Bill's system was successful because of the DSB. We could just as easily say that Bill's system was successful in spite of the DSB. In order to state that Bill's system was successful because of the DSB, we would have to explain how and why his success was linked to the DSB. Science and nature won't allow us to do that.
Ow..... And BTW...... Bill does take steps that limit the amount of rot and decay his sand bed harbors. This is contrary to the typical Shemik style DSB method.