When was the last time you went on a picnic? Ever notice what happens when you drop crumbs on the ground? You get a whole host of bugs show up and grab each and every crumb within an hour or so. Mouths just waiting for food.
They were not just waiting for you to come along and drop crumbs from your PB&J.
Ever notice what happens to fruit that drops from a tree/bush/plant? If it is a soft fruit like strawberries will be gone in a day.
I live in central Florida. We grow strawberries here. We grow so many strawberries here that we have an annual strawberry festival just a few miles from my home. I've seen many strawberries rot. Never seen one completely rot away in a day. Not once. Never even heard of a strawberry rotting away in a days time.
A whole host of critters will come along to take a bite or two. Lots of other critters will lay eggs and larvae will appear in short order (brand spanking new mouths). Bacteria will break down the rest and the nutrients released will be absorbed by the plants in the immediate area.
So you understand the process. Great. Why then, would you come online, to a place where one of the major problems is plant growth, and support the process that fuels plant growth?
All this happens in temperate areas where organic accumulation is possible under the right conditions and over thousands of years. In the tropics, it's the same process increased exponentially. In the tropics there is no soil accumulation. Everything. Absolutely everything is consumed/absorbed/assimilated in very short order.
https://www.google.com/search?q=tro...a=X&ei=MfXcU4LiO5KWyATc64DoBg&ved=0CAgQ_AUoAQ
Just brows through the images in the link above.
First you are describing a temperate zone which is quite different from a tropical zone.
No...... The same processes take place in each location. The process is just sped up in the tropics. You still can not support large numbers of detritivores on the forest floor, or in a DSB, without large amounts of detritus. like I explained earlier, in areas where there is little rotting organic matter, you will have few organisms that feed on rotting organic matter.
Second, leaf litter in North America is disappearing at a rapid rate. Why? The introduction of a single invasive species: the worm. Many forests already have no litter. At the course I regularly play golf at, last year's leaf litter is gone by mid August. So, even in a temperate climate, you can create conditions where there are mouths just waiting to be fed.
No man!!!! What happens to the worms and other tiny critters when the leaf litter is gone???? They're gone too. You don't end up with a clean forest floor where the ground is crawling with large numbers of tiny critter just waiting for the leaf litter to return. When the leaf litter is gone, they die. They can not return until their food source returns.
Seems like a good reason to have that sand bed and all those critters. The more varied and dynamic your food web, the better able the tank is to absorb excess nutrients.
We run skimmers, change water, run GFO and GAC, dose carbon, and harvest algae, all in an effort to remove excess nutrients. Why do all these things if absorbing excess nutrients within the system is a good thing?