Are Deep Sand Beds, DSBs, dangerous to use in a marine aquarium?

I agree that new calcium carbonate sediment is a sink for inorganic phosphate for some period. That said, that doesn't imply that inorganic phosphate isn't constantly being released from it as well, as long as the net breakdown of organic P is sufficient to provide both for the binding to the calcium carbonate surfaces, and the release to the water column.

no, from the waste products of the organisms in the system. very little is from the breakdown of the food we put into the systems, that gets used up quickly by the organisms we are feeding.

And it is the food that then is modified into waste. Every fish is excreting inorganic phosphate into the water, and the ultimate source of that phosphate is the food you added.
 
i like this graphic for the phosphate cycle in the marine environment. a good way of seeing the consumers and producers of inorganic an organic P.

phosphate_graphic_basic_276251.png


it is not the inorganic P that needs to be worried about and it seems the hobby industry is fixated on. it is the organic P that we need to be paying more attention to. inorganic P is a very small percentage of the total P in a system.

the more organisms there are in a system, the more total P in the system. this is fantastic if the greater biomass is in the organisms we purchased and/or are cultivating, but not necessarily a good thing if the biomass is in waste processing. what good is this biomass doing for our must have organisms besides increasing the total N and P of the system and pushing up the trophic state of the system.

G~
 
no, from the waste products of the organisms in the system. very little is from the breakdown of the food we put into the systems, that gets used up quickly by the organisms we are feeding.

Don't things need to eat something before they can produce waste? ;)

BTW, take a closer look at your simplified graphic of choice. Much of the P cycle is very much recycled, as opposed to simply being sunk into the sediment. It even shows exchange with P going from the sediment back into the water column ;) Storms (aquarist in our tanks) kick up sediment and organics, and of course a huge host of sediment dwelling critters (both in the ocean and our tanks) do something called bioturbation. All of which contributes to recycling a goodly portion of the P in that P cycle.

It's also a pretty safe bet that Randy isn't ignoring organic vs. inorganic P, and I know I'm not. Though I will admit many likely don't think of it, since organic P isn't readily tested for.
 
That graphic ignores that in a reef tank, the huge input is food falling from the sky. :D

it is not the inorganic P that needs to be worried about and it seems the hobby industry is fixated on. it is the organic P that we need to be paying more attention to

Why do you think that?
In other words, what about it worries you more than it worries you about inorganic P?

How do you decide what forms of organic P are worth worrying about, and which are not?
 
" phosphate sorbed on clays" per the chart you selected would be species of inorganic phospahte "sorbed" at the surface perhaps some orgnic phosaphte too, ;not the phosphate that is incorporated into calcium carbonate crystal matrix .The later reduces biological availability per the paper you cited as it would obviously require dissolution and not just desorbtion via biological activity or equilibration with i phosphate levels in the water. Further it is noted that as the level of phosphate incorporated into the calcium carbonate crystal matrix increases the adsorbtion rates at the surface decrease.

So, it seems to me if the paper is correct and I'm reading it correctly that calcium carbonate could lose it's ability to adsorb biologically available inorganic or even organic phosphate on it's surface overtime but that does not mean that it releases what has been incorporated in the crystal matrix since that would require the aragonite mass to dissolve. It is sunk/sequesterd.
A likely outcome is that the sand may loose much of it's ability to adsorb phosphate on it's surface overtime but won't give much back that has already been sunk in the crystal matrix at typical reef tank pH levels IMO.

That graphic ignores that in a reef tank, the huge input is food falling from the sky. :D
It also ignores export via harvesting and skimming among other things.

It also notes dissolution and precipitation ; the former should be minimal at aquarium pH levels for most precipitated phosphate.

You say:

it is the organic P that we need to be paying more attention to

Not all of that is biologically availabe. How would you pay attention to it? I have no idea what % is. All of the inorganic phosphate is reactive.

you also say:

it's the mineralized phosphate that's the problem.

They are not the same thing. The mineralized phosphate is not reactive unless the mineral is dissolved which is not likely at a significant level in a reef tank,IMO
 
these upwellings are from the disruption of deeper marine sediments. stir the substrate on occasion for a good nutrient upwelling in the system.

Not exactly, up wellings occur on reefs from a drop in water pressure under the footprint of the obstruction( the reef ) relative to the water crashing into it.As a result the water under it moves up and the void is filled with new water at the bottom passing through the substrate under the reef.This is known as advection . It' an engineering issue in bridge construction and the reason sand seems to collapse under your feet when you stand in waves. Just stirring up substrate won't cause upwelling.
 
Don't things need to eat something before they can produce waste? ;)

i am not. the amount of waste produced is very close to the amount of material brought in. that is the point i am trying to make. very little of the material an organism takes in is retained in its mass.

BTW, take a closer look at your simplified graphic of choice. Much of the P cycle is very much recycled, as opposed to simply being sunk into the sediment. It even shows exchange with P going from the sediment back into the water column ;) Storms (aquarist in our tanks) kick up sediment and organics, and of course a huge host of sediment dwelling critters (both in the ocean and our tanks) do something called bioturbation. All of which contributes to recycling a goodly portion of the P in that P cycle.

that graph was only for the P cycle in the marine environment. here is a graphic showing the entire P cycle. note the amount of arrows going into the substrate, and the number of arrows leaving the substrate.

phosphoruscycle.gif


if we look at the entire P cycle we see that P is locked in marine sediments.

i am all about stirring up the substrate in an aquarium on a regular basis, but that is not what we have been told. we are also told to setup our systems in a way that inhibits our ability to stir up the entire substrate to release the trapped organic material. we put to much LR in the system creating unreachable areas.

It's also a pretty safe bet that Randy isn't ignoring organic vs. inorganic P, and I know I'm not. Though I will admit many likely don't think of it, since organic P isn't readily tested for.

you can not test for organic P. it is impossible, but we can at least use our eyes. the more biomass and the more waste organic material, the higher the organic P in the system. what i think is missed is the main source of inorganic P, the decomposition of solid organic waste.

That graphic ignores that in a reef tank, the huge input is food falling from the sky. :D

what from of P is falling from the sky? or do you mean plankton?

it is not the inorganic P that needs to be worried about and it seems the hobby industry is fixated on. it is the organic P that we need to be paying more attention to

Why do you think that?
In other words, what about it worries you more than it worries you about inorganic P?

How do you decide what forms of organic P are worth worrying about, and which are not?

by looking at what is the primary source of the problem. the biggest producer of inorganic P is the decomposition of waste organic P. the dissolved inorganic P is not a big concern, if the levels are low enough, then the bacteria and micro algae will take care of that and can be easily removed by skimming.

" phosphate sorbed on clays" per the chart you selected would be species of inorganic phospahte "sorbed" at the surface perhaps some orgnic phosaphte too, ;not the phosphate that is incorporated into calcium carbonate crystal matrix .The later reduces biological availability per the paper you cited as it would obviously require dissolution and not just desorbtion via biological activity or equilibration with i phosphate levels in the water. Further it is noted that as the level of phosphate incorporated into the calcium carbonate crystal matrix increases the adsorbtion rates at the surface decrease.

So, it seems to me if the paper is correct and I'm reading it correctly that calcium carbonate could lose it's ability to adsorb biologically available inorganic or even organic phosphate on it's surface overtime but that does not mean that it releases what has been incorporated in the crystal matrix since that would require the aragonite mass to dissolve. It is sunk/sequesterd.
A likely outcome is that the sand may loose much of it's ability to adsorb phosphate on it's surface overtime but won't give much back that has already been sunk in the crystal matrix at typical reef tank pH levels IMO.

looking at the chart again. note 4 is what Randy is talking about with dissolution, and i think this is what you are talking about. no argument here. what i am talking about is the role phosphate solubilizing bacteria play in all of this. they can pull P from the matrix. this is not a purely chemical reaction.

That graphic ignores that in a reef tank, the huge input is food falling from the sky. :D
It also ignores export via harvesting and skimming among other things.

no it doesn't ignore it because it is not removed in the marine environment. it gets sunk in the substrate. if you want to remove it, then here is a modified version of the same chart showing which types of P are removed using various P removal methods.

phosphate_circles_final_graaphic.png


It also notes dissolution and precipitation ; the former should be minimal at aquarium pH levels for most precipitated phosphate.

confused. this graph is of the marine environment, how is that not what happens in our systems? do our systems not behave like nature? if not, then why are we trying to emulate it? which is it? ;) the former is done by bacterial activity. the same activity that allows "cooking" of LR. the phosphate solubilizing bacteria are doing this.

You say:

it is the organic P that we need to be paying more attention to

Not all of that is biologically availabe. How would you pay attention to it? I have no idea what % is. All of the inorganic phosphate is reactive.

all of that biomass is organic P that is available. P is in constant motion. all of the solid waste organic material in the substrate is potentially available. it just takes a little bit of stirring. this can all be converted to inorganic P. any waste organic P is enroute to being available inorganic P. it is decomposing.

you also say:

it's the mineralized phosphate that's the problem.

They are not the same thing. The mineralized phosphate is not reactive unless the mineral is dissolved which is not likely at a significant level in a reef tank,IMO

phosphate solubilizing bacteria are able utilizing the mineralized P. it is this give and take between the calcium carbonate matrix and the bacteria that keep P in flux and allows the calcium carbonate to function as a phosphate binder. P moves slowly downward through the substrate. free sites on the Calcium carbonate matrix bind P, the bacteria remove P, the bacteria die, or get consumed. more P binds to the matrix. the bacteria biomass falls deeper in the substrate through the actions of other bacteria and benthic organisms until resources become limited. usually C in the deeper reaches of the substrate when the available space between the grains is full of detritus. solid organic waste. whether it is bacterial milm or solid waste from organisms.

Phosphorus liberation by aquatic microorganisms.

Dynamics and Diversity of Phosphate Mineralizing Bacteria in the Coral Reefs of Gulf of Mannar.

these upwellings are from the disruption of deeper marine sediments. stir the substrate on occasion for a good nutrient upwelling in the system.

Not exactly, up wellings occur on reefs from a drop in water pressure under the footprint of the obstruction( the reef ) relative to the water crashing into it.As a result the water under it moves up and the void is filled with new water at the bottom passing through the substrate under the reef.This is known as advection . It' an engineering issue in bridge construction and the reason sand seems to collapse under your feet when you stand in waves. Just stirring up substrate won't cause upwelling.

it is a disruption that is releasing the trapped organic material. something that should be done more often in our systems.

G~
 
This article by Eric Borneman takes look at calcium carbonate dissolution in sand beds and associated nutient dynamics. It also summarizes his evalaution of the Jaubert mehtod /plenums and some experiments .The sections on Nutrient Dynamics and Carbonate Dynamics are most relevant to this discsusion :

http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2007-02/eb/index.php

These are few quotes from it:


"..it is ironic that many aquarists state that sand beds become “nutrient sinks” that result in a “source” of nutrients in the tank; terms that are technically antithetic to each other...."


the general aquarium population is that carbonate sediments dissolve, largely in part due to the “acids” released by benthic organisms or the acidic respiratory CO<sub>2</sub> they release. Yet, pH in carbonate sediments is not really acidic,.....


....the dissolution of calcium carbonate sand is incapable of providing adequate calcium or carbonate alkalinity by dissolution to aquariums holding even very small amounts of coral and coralline algae....

Not much dissolutio per his experiments. So, if not much calcium carbonate is dissolving then not much phosphate sunk in the crystal matrix is being liberated.


"...Entsch et al (1983) examined the dynamics of phosphorus and nitrogen in the sediments of coral reefs around Davies Reef, part of the Great Barrier Reef, and Suzumura et al (2002) examined phosphorus cycling in the reef sediments of Ishigaki Island, Japan........The conclusion was that sediments did act as a sink for phosphate..."

'"... Yet, this increase is not significant in the overlying water in most cases. Inputs to the sediment nutrient pool are likely the accumulation of particulate material (detritus) and its accumulation into reef biota..."
 
You can measure organic phosphate in the water. Hach sells a tedious kit to break down organics into detectable inorganic phosphate. I've never recommended it since there is no way to react to a given number. It includes everything from small organics up to whole bacteria. I do not think we have any idea what we'd want that single number to be or not be. :)

the biggest producer of inorganic P is the decomposition of waste organic P

That is an assertion of yours that seems to lack evidence. Do you have any?

Why do you believe it is not direct excretion of inorganic phosphate from organisms (such as fish) that ate the foods and digested it into smaller bits like ammonia and phosphate?

what from of P is falling from the sky? or do you mean plankton?

I've said foods in almost every post. Foods that the hobbyist adds, dropping them from the sky above the tank. Foods have both organic and inorganic P, and as it passes through the GI tract of organisms, it is mostly converted into inorganic P. Bacteria in the GI tract will incorporate some of that into organic P again (such as DNA). So the excretions of organisms contain both organic P (as in whole bactera bodies) and inorganic P.

I've not seen a detailed breakdown for most organisms we keep, but in a person, it is mostly inorganic P that we urinate out. :)
 
Hey, what if we make the deep sand bed out of silica sand or micro glass beads, would that keep the P out of the sink?
 
Hey, what if we make the deep sand bed out of silica sand or micro glass beads, would that keep the P out of the sink?
No. One of the things that P binds with is a form of silica. Using silicate sand may or may not change how P is bound, but it will still be in the sandbed.
 
This article by Eric Borneman takes look at calcium carbonate dissolution in sand beds and associated nutient dynamics. It also summarizes his evalaution of the Jaubert mehtod /plenums and some experiments .The sections on Nutrient Dynamics and Carbonate Dynamics are most relevant to this discsusion :

http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2007-02/eb/index.php

These are few quotes from it:


"..it is ironic that many aquarists state that sand beds become "œnutrient sinks" that result in a "œsource" of nutrients in the tank; terms that are technically antithetic to each other...."


the general aquarium population is that carbonate sediments dissolve, largely in part due to the "œacids" released by benthic organisms or the acidic respiratory CO<sub>2</sub> they release. Yet, pH in carbonate sediments is not really acidic,.....


....the dissolution of calcium carbonate sand is incapable of providing adequate calcium or carbonate alkalinity by dissolution to aquariums holding even very small amounts of coral and coralline algae....

Not much dissolutio per his experiments. So, if not much calcium carbonate is dissolving then not much phosphate sunk in the crystal matrix is being liberated.


"...Entsch et al (1983) examined the dynamics of phosphorus and nitrogen in the sediments of coral reefs around Davies Reef, part of the Great Barrier Reef, and Suzumura et al (2002) examined phosphorus cycling in the reef sediments of Ishigaki Island, Japan........The conclusion was that sediments did act as a sink for phosphate..."

'"... Yet, this increase is not significant in the overlying water in most cases. Inputs to the sediment nutrient pool are likely the accumulation of particulate material (detritus) and its accumulation into reef biota..."

here is a good discussion about what is wrong with this entire article. going through it pretty much word for word.

if what Eric said were true, then why does EVERY phosphorous cycle have P locked up in substrates. whether it is marine or terrestrial. please, just show me one phosphorus cycle that shows P is not sunk. i have been looking for over 10 years. i like you once believed that substrates were not P sinks.



I thought you could measure organic Phosphorus?
http://hahana.soest.hawaii.edu/hot/protocols/chap8.html

not easily, and most of the P can not be tested without destroying the organic material that contains the P.

You can measure organic phosphate in the water. Hach sells a tedious kit to break down organics into detectable inorganic phosphate. I've never recommended it since there is no way to react to a given number. It includes everything from small organics up to whole bacteria. I do not think we have any idea what we'd want that single number to be or not be. :)

the biggest producer of inorganic P is the decomposition of waste organic P

That is an assertion of yours that seems to lack evidence. Do you have any?

Why do you believe it is not direct excretion of inorganic phosphate from organisms (such as fish) that ate the foods and digested it into smaller bits like ammonia and phosphate?

another article about the phosphorus cycle. it contains a nice simple graphic of what i am suggesting. it is simplified in that it does not show any of the interactions with the substrates. no exports at all in the graphic. eutrophic system.

the greater the amount of biomass, the greater the amount of material being recycled. all of this biomass needs to eat something, and needs to be expelling wastes. there must be a large amount of organic material to take in. leaving waste organic material as the prime candidate. bound organic P.

what from of P is falling from the sky? or do you mean plankton?

I've said foods in almost every post. Foods that the hobbyist adds, dropping them from the sky above the tank. Foods have both organic and inorganic P, and as it passes through the GI tract of organisms, it is mostly converted into inorganic P. Bacteria in the GI tract will incorporate some of that into organic P again (such as DNA). So the excretions of organisms contain both organic P (as in whole bactera bodies) and inorganic P.

the dropping from the sky is represented as runoff from terrestrial sources in the phosphate cycles. we are the terrestrial source. :D we are the source of any new organic P entering the system. in order for a system to maintain its total P an equal amount of P must be exported. if one keeps adding food, and not exporting an equal amount of mass, then the system by definition is becoming more eutrophic. any increase in biomass from population growth of support organisms represents an increase in total P. if P was exported as quickly as it is imported, then there would not be any P for these support organisms. their populations would remain very low if exist at all.

if we as mature organisms are able to maintain a constant mass and not increase, then how can we be incorporating more and more P? what mass are we displacing? all of the P that enters an organisms will be released. either immediately, or somewhere down the line. inorganic P is quickly utilized by multiple micro organisms and even the calcium carbonate structures. it is easily tested for and controlled. all biomass is capable of becoming inorganic P. the more organic P the greater the chance of a huge influx of inorganic P if disturbed from the substrate or a sudden die off of a given biomass.

I've not seen a detailed breakdown for most organisms we keep, but in a person, it is mostly inorganic P that we urinate out. :)

having kidneys also, i would expect that fish would be "normal".

an accidental find while looking for phosphorus content in fish wastes.

Nutrient supply from fishes facilitates macroalgae and suppresses corals in a Caribbean coral reef ecosystem

G~
 
So not impossible, just expensive and destructive to the tank water sample?

It necessarily breaks the phosphate out of the organics and then tests the inorganic phosphate that came out.

The only other option is a total detection of P atoms in something like ICP where it is burned so hot that it breaks apart into atoms and then basically counts atoms.
 
All pictures aside, the ultimate primary source of all types of phosphate in reef tanks is food that we feed. Some may go to and then be released from the substrate, and some goes into organisms and is released. And some goes into organisms and substrate and stays there or is exported if we export the organisms. Some gets exported in various other ways, such as GFO, GAC, skimming, polymeric resins, etc.

Pretty simple and I don't really see how anything more complicated really needs to be involved in our husbandry concerns. :)
 
What form is that and where did you learn of it?

Phosphate does not bind to the surface of silica sand. :)

Sorry, I did not mean to imply that phosphate binds to the surface of silica sand. It came from one of the articles that Reefin Dude posted well back in this thread. There is some mineral formed when phosphate bonds with some form of silicate/silca. From recent posts in this thread, it seems that phosphate is miniralized with a number of things this way.

It seems to me that keeping phosphate bioavailable is more of an issue than the other way around. It 'wants to' bond with a number of things and ends up being precipitated out.
 
Well, I'm not sure exactly what you read, but phosphate does not form bonds with silicate or silica in seawater. If you have the specific link I'd be happy to check it out, but I can't read through 16 pages of posts looking for it. :D

Calcium phosphate and magnesium phosphate, and mixtures with calcium and magnesium carbonate/phosphate can certainly still precipitate in the presence of silica sand, since there is plenty of calcium and magnesium and carbonate in seawater. :)
 
I think that if you are looking for scientific literature you may be waiting a long time as this is a hobby and there are no experts, as there are no degrees for a hobby. These are also classified as "ornamental tropical fish" and not food fish so again there will be no Government studies.
I think we should rely on hobbiests such as are here to tell us how long their DSB lasted and if it didn't last, why not, what happened to it.
How many people here ran a DSB and how long did it last?

7 years.
Lost it due to a power failure (California brown outs a few years back).

Oddly enough the only thing that survived in the tank was the deep sand bed, the rock (or it recovered anyway), and some zoa's. I still have the rock and most of the sand today since I used it to seed the two tanks I have now. I'll be moving it to a 40 breeder when I combine the two tanks later this month.

So overall 7 years in my 100 gallon. About 4 to 5 years in the two 29 cubes I have since I am using the same stuff more or less. While I'd like to think about 11 to 12 years it isn't contiguous so I'll just say 7 ;) I'll always run a display with a deep bed. It looks natural and I've not personally had a failure due to it.

Never the less this has been a interesting read and I believe it comes down to personal preference and balance.
 
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