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.
think of our systems as a chemistry equation. balance for P if P is a constantly added reactant. that is all i am trying to point out. the P has to be removed at a rate that matches the desired trophic level of the system, or it is going to become eutrophic. released into the substrate is not balancing out for P. P is still in the system. P going through an organism is also still in the system. the total amount of P is increasing.
all i am suggesting is to create a balanced system around P. P in equals P out. in order to do this we must understand all of the places that P can hide. just because it is in a substrate between the grains as detritus, in a living organism, or bound to the surfaces of calcium carbonate does not mean it is not in the system and representing an increase in total P of the system.
all of those export mechanisms ignore a huge chunk of where P hides. they are all a day late and a dollar short to the P party. they have to first wait for bacteria to make the P available for them. they can not directly access P from the substrate, where most of it is being sunk.
Agreed that a fair amount of what an organism eats is passed through as waste, but that waste also turns into food for other organisms and so on and so forth in fairly tight nutrient recycling. Though in our tanks, (and I think we actually agree on this) there is ultimately an undesired build up that does removal in some manner or another.
as i was saying earlier. just balance the system using P as the commodity.
food for other organisms means an increase in total P. we get back to the hamburgers again. to support any organism, there needs to be enough hamburgers for them to eat available with an equal amount of hamburgers being released. if more P is coming into the system from us as food, and their is an increase in biomass from the population of support organisms, then the system is not maintaining a constant level of P.
Still a substantial amount of that P recycling
recycled, but the total amount of P is not going down. that is the point i am trying to make. it doesn't matter how it is being recycled, if more P is coming in, then there is an increase in total P of the system. the system is becoming more eutrophic. which could be the goal if the more eutrophic corals are wishing to be kept, but for those keeping oligotrophic organism, this can be fatal.
Again I think we're mostly in agreement here.
probably.

disturbing the substrate released the trapped organic P which can then be siphoned out, collected into specialized settling areas, or even trapped in a short term use canister filter for exporting. the point is that this once trapped organic P has been exported from the substrate and is not longer in the system. a major export of P has occurred. a total drop in P has occurred. the source of significant amount of P has been removed.
Fish food that we aquarist throw in, you've seemingly been ignoring that source of P.
:lol: no i am not. the aquarist represents the terrestrial runoff arrow. we are terrestrial, are we not.

we are the original source of P for the system. the same as in all of the diagrams. we also need to be realize we are the arrow labeled terrestrial upheaval.
G~
P.S.- another point that i think needs to be made is that waste organic material makes fantastic fertilizer. we use it all of the time in gardening. it is no different than in the marine environment. if fish poo was as big as cow manure, we would be more inclined to see the problem.
