For clarification; no ammonia was dosed as noted earlier by another poster
. Food and live animals were used to provide nutrients in this experiment.
This is from the study:
We prepared homogenized squid (Loligo sp.) pellets for food as described in Pawlik et al. (1995). Fish were fed ad libitum each week day (unfed on weekends) until they did not ingest the final pellet offered to them. The final uneaten pellet was left in the aquarium to provide food for scavengers in the tank
This is a point of emphasis because , I think it's important to represent the study accurately .
The other criticisms of the study noted above may/may not have weight and folks can form their own opinion on them.
I for one have never heard of a 6 square foot minimum ; don't know what it means in terms of tank size or sand volume or how it is relevant.
For those who wish to read it the second article/study, it is here:
http://www.advancedaquarist.com/2005/7/aafeature
I personally have thought that if deeper sand gets flow to provide nutrients aided by infauna transport and channeling it can denitrify at least in the early years and perhaps do a bit more denitrification than a shallow bed with the same footprint since the deeper bed simply has more sand and surface area.
However, this study seems to suggest otherwise. At relatively high bioloads, nitrates were kept low equally well in 2.5 cm (1 inch) or 9cm(3.6 inch ) depths of sand. This suggests the extra sand depth doesn't help in tanks with live animals and infauna ;just as it didn't in the sterile tanks in the first experiment.
The live sand and rock where in the tanks for over 4 months( 128 days) and the animals for 118. Given 5 months ,6 months a year: Would deeper sand reduce more nitrate than shallower sand ? I have no idea but the study showed it didn't and that 1 inch beds kept nitrate low and depth didn't make a difference in tanks with infauna and other animals over a 128 day experiment time frame..
While the nitrate reduction with shallow and deep sand did not vary in this experiment ; it was interesting to me that the the tanks holding fish live rock ,live sand and invertebrates and fed pelletized food in this experiment reduced nitrate to lower levels than the relatively sterile tanks in the first experiment where only ammonium chloride was dosed .Bioload was pretty high and the folks doing the study seemed to be pretty rigorous about equating food inputs to the earlier ammonium chloride inputs.
Does anyone have a plausible explanation as to why the live tanks reduced more nitrate than the sterile ones ? I have a thought on it but would rather hear from others before tossing it out there.
. Food and live animals were used to provide nutrients in this experiment.
This is from the study:
We prepared homogenized squid (Loligo sp.) pellets for food as described in Pawlik et al. (1995). Fish were fed ad libitum each week day (unfed on weekends) until they did not ingest the final pellet offered to them. The final uneaten pellet was left in the aquarium to provide food for scavengers in the tank
This is a point of emphasis because , I think it's important to represent the study accurately .
The other criticisms of the study noted above may/may not have weight and folks can form their own opinion on them.
I for one have never heard of a 6 square foot minimum ; don't know what it means in terms of tank size or sand volume or how it is relevant.
For those who wish to read it the second article/study, it is here:
http://www.advancedaquarist.com/2005/7/aafeature
I personally have thought that if deeper sand gets flow to provide nutrients aided by infauna transport and channeling it can denitrify at least in the early years and perhaps do a bit more denitrification than a shallow bed with the same footprint since the deeper bed simply has more sand and surface area.
However, this study seems to suggest otherwise. At relatively high bioloads, nitrates were kept low equally well in 2.5 cm (1 inch) or 9cm(3.6 inch ) depths of sand. This suggests the extra sand depth doesn't help in tanks with live animals and infauna ;just as it didn't in the sterile tanks in the first experiment.
The live sand and rock where in the tanks for over 4 months( 128 days) and the animals for 118. Given 5 months ,6 months a year: Would deeper sand reduce more nitrate than shallower sand ? I have no idea but the study showed it didn't and that 1 inch beds kept nitrate low and depth didn't make a difference in tanks with infauna and other animals over a 128 day experiment time frame..
While the nitrate reduction with shallow and deep sand did not vary in this experiment ; it was interesting to me that the the tanks holding fish live rock ,live sand and invertebrates and fed pelletized food in this experiment reduced nitrate to lower levels than the relatively sterile tanks in the first experiment where only ammonium chloride was dosed .Bioload was pretty high and the folks doing the study seemed to be pretty rigorous about equating food inputs to the earlier ammonium chloride inputs.
Does anyone have a plausible explanation as to why the live tanks reduced more nitrate than the sterile ones ? I have a thought on it but would rather hear from others before tossing it out there.