._ Use a carbon-driven denitrator._ There are a variety of different commercial systems available, none of which are especially popular in the United States at this time._ However, they can do a good job of removing nitrate and some aquarists quite like them.
In one of these types of systems, a carbon source is added to a portion of tank water in a low oxygen environment._ In many cases, the carbon source is methanol._ The methanol is mixed with aquarium water in a controlled situation (such as fluid pumped through a coil) and the methanol is consumed by bacteria that use nitrate as an electron acceptor instead of oxygen:
12 NO3- + 10 CH3OH + 12 H+_ à10 CO2 + 6 N2 + 26 H2O
The end result is that nitrate is removed from the aquarium._ The typical drawback to such a system is the need for careful control over the conditions, and the consequent complexity that often accompanies such a reactor.
7._ Use a sulfur denitrator._ In_ these systems, bacteria use elemental sulfur and produce N2 from it and nitrate according the following equation (or something similar):
2 H2O + 5 S + 6 NO3- __à3 N2 + 5 SO4-- + 4 H+
It has also been suggested to pass the effluent of such a reactor through a bed of aragonite to use the acid (H+) produced to dissolve the calcium carbonate, and thereby provide calcium and alkalinity to the aquarium.
While that is a fine idea, it doesnââ"šÂ¬Ã¢"žÂ¢t add much calcium and alkalinity to most aquaria.
To estimate the magnitude of the effect, we start with a liberal estimate of how much nitrate might be removed. Say 10 ppm of nitrate per week.
10 ppm nitrate = 0.16 mmole/L of nitrate
Since 4 moles of H+ are produced for every 6 moles of nitrate consumed, this will produce
0.107 mmoles/L of H+ per week
How much calcium this could produce?
Assume that it takes one proton to dissolve one calcium carbonate:
CaCO3 + H+ ßàCa++ + HCO3-
Clearly, this is a substantial overestimate because much of the acid will be used up driving the pH down to the point where CaCO3 can even begin to dissolve. Consequently, we have an upside limit of
0.107 mmoles of Ca++ per week
since calcium weighs 40 mg/mmol, that's
4.3 ppm Ca++ per week.
For comparison, an aquarist adding 2% of the tank volume in saturated limewater daily is adding on the order of 16 ppm of calcium per day._ Consequently, this method may not be especially useful for maintaining calcium and alkalinity levels._ On the other hand, the acid produced will have a long term lowering effect on the alkalinity, so if you use it, watch the alkalinity.
This idea has been around for years. I can't see any merit to it at all.
I have spent much of the last couple of years taking an indirect look at what happens in reef tanks with regard to various chemical constituents , primarily the toxic heavy metals, referred to in the hobby as ââ"šÂ¬Ã…"œtrace elements.ââ"šÂ¬Ã‚ Some of these materials are biologically necessary, but none has been ever shown to have any benefits at concentrations above those found in natural sea water. Indeed, most of them have been shown to be both acutely and chronically toxic at even slightly higher concentrations (see, for example, the discussion in Shimek, 2002d and these references: Alutoin, et al., 2001; Breitburg, et al. 1999; Goh, and Chou, 1992; Heyward, 1988; Negri, and Heyward, 2001; Reichelt-Brushett and Harrison, 1999). Those studies of documented toxicity notwithstanding, I have found that many of these chemicals have exceptionally high concentrations in the liquid medium of reef aquaria, as well as within the food we add to the systems..............................
In natural situations, heavy metal pollution typically results in the deposition of metals in the sulfide-rich anoxic layers deep in the sediments. It is likely that a similar deposition pattern occurs in deep sand beds. Consequently, the anoxic areas of the deep sand bed would be the place where tank waters would be detoxified. Water is slowly moved through these areas by the cumulative motions of the animals in the upper layers of the sand beds. This slow percolation of water results in these areas accumulating organic materials. The bacterial utilization of this organic material results in the elimination of oxygen in the deeper sediments. This, in turn, facilitates the removal of metals from solution. However, the accumulation of organic material in these sediments also results in these anoxic sediment layers getting thicker with time. If this occurs, the level where free oxygen occurs becomes shallower. Most animals cannot tolerate anoxic conditions, and will not penetrate those layers. This chain of events leads to a positive feedback loop, working over extended periods. As organic material builds up in tanks, the anoxic layers become deeper forcing the animals into shallower sediment layers. As this occurs, the animals can pump less water through the deep layers. This reduction in pumping facilitates the increase in thickness of these anoxic layers seen in highly polluted areas ââ"šÂ¬Ã¢â‚¬Å“ or in old reef tanks. In severely polluted situations in natural ecosystems, the anaerobic sediments may actually start at the sediment-water interface (Rosenberg, 1976). In aquaria, a situation such as this is very unlikely; the system will likely crash before it occurs.
It is tempting to suggest that the solution to this quandary would be simply to vacuum the sediments of all organic materials. However, such vacuuming would destroy the functionality of the sand bed as far as its beneficial aspects of excess nutrient processing and feeding the reef are concerned. However, as an alternative to breaking the tank and sand bed completely down, a thorough vacuuming of the sediment followed by re-inoculation of the sediment fauna must be considered as a viable alternative. It is important to note, however, that such vacuuming might not remove much in the way of precipitated metals. Rather, it would be a way to keep the organic loads from becoming extreme. It may also drastically affect pH, redox, oxygen levels and release lots of rather unpleasant anaerobes into the water column.
Alternatively, maintenance of a highly diverse and densely populated sand bed will help utilize much or all of this excess organic material and thus prevent the accumulation of excess organic material. Using this method of sand bed maintenance requires careful monitoring of the sand bed, and period replenishment of the faunal diversity.
Likewise, changes in the overall tank pH cycle may result in brief transient periods of acidic sediment conditions. During these periods, many of the bound heavy metals may become soluble. This would result in transient exposures to these metals. As heavy metal poisoning is commonly cumulative, the final lethal effects of such brief periods of toxicity may be seen only after several months or years.
gregt said:I'll say this. You guys are nothing if not persistant. LOL
ldrhawke said:I have yet to hear any BB advocates, that have converted to plastic bottoms, talk about or give reports on water quality since they have converted. They seems to spend most of their time knocking anyone stupid enough to use a DSB and not convert to BB.
I can only assume, that your looking for a bigger and better skimmer, that nitrates continue to be an issue with plastic bottom reef tanks. Am I wrong?
gregt said:You couldn't be more wrong.
First off, I've had 0 nitrates in any of my BB tanks. I use no chemicals and do "normal" water changes to accomplish this. It just doesn't get any easier than BB. I don't talk about it because, for me, it's a given. I wouldn't be using the system if it didn't work.
And secondly, I've had three systems in the last 5 years and three skimmers. I've upgraded skimmers because I've upgraded my systems.
It's very important that you size your equipment correctly. The Euroreef CS6-2 I was using on my 180 was a little undersized, it certainly wasn't going to work on my 400 gallon tank now was it?
And third, my only concern about DSB's is the vast amount of incorrect and misleading information being presented on their behalf. I have no problems with people that choose a DSB as their method. Heck, I still help people in my reef club design tanks around them if that's the way they want to go. I do have a problem when people present DSB's as a simple solution that has no downside. They aren't.
Your post is very elegant and clever but factually way off base.
I did not post here to disparage. I honestly commend you for your persistence. I still don't understand WHY you want to keep poop as a pet, but I don't understand why a blind guy feels the need to climb mount Everest, either.
You have my admiration for your attempts to find different solution. I'm sorry if my post conveyed any other message.
I never realized how much of my sand bed was actually poop until I went BB. I have from 750 to 1000 gph (edit) in my 55-gal, depending on how many powerheads I have turned on. That inclused a Via-Aqua 2600 sitting on the botton. Every place where the rock meets the glass collects detritus on the glass where the rock shelters the flow.ldrhawke said:When I see my fish waste, very little if any ever reaches the bottom. It nearly all breaks up and goes into suspension and is carried into the tank flow. I have no visible detritus on the bottom to remove. It isn't simply a matter of taking out what settles on the bottom.
:thumbsup:ldrhawke said:Also, let me state it has become obvious over the last year that a good reef keeper can make any reef keeping system. Some systems are just more work and less forgiving than others.
After removing my DSB and sump (I'll get a new one soon), mostly discontinuing use of my POS skimmer, and adding a fish, my nitrates went from undetectable to 2 over the course of a couple of months. 10% water changes once a week, my zoos and tulip anemones opened within an hour of being added to the tank and are doing fine.ldrhawke said:I have yet to hear any BB advocates, that have converted to plastic bottoms, talk about or give reports on water quality since they have converted.
If it is constantly pulling out very nasty sludge even when the tank has not fed then it is undersized. A properly sized skimmer should have occasional periods when it isn't pulling much visible organic material out of the water. If you're always pulling out visible organic's then you still have room for more filtration....what are the indications or measurements you take to know your skimmer is under sized?
See the above. If you're reading nitrates, then you are several stages too late to fix the problem. If you remove it before it breaks down, you don't need a large biological filter (which also adds bio load to your system) to deal with it.You already have zero nitrates and do not use chemicals, what are the indicators for too small a skimmer?
That tank is brand new and currently has only 3 small fish. This is why I'm not sure if my current skimmer is optimal or not yet, although I think I went big enough that it should be able to handle it. This is also the reason why I'm reserving judgement on what pump I will end up running on it and whether I will use the second injector port or not. Currently, I don't need either, but with a larger fish load, that may change.What is you present fish load in your 400 G set up?
I totally agree with get rid of the poop. But, over 50% of the detritus and bacterial detritus from animals in our tanks is p#ss, not poop. When I see my fish waste, very little if any ever reaches the bottom. It nearly all breaks up and goes into suspension and is carried into the tank flow. I have no visible detritus on the bottom to remove. It isn't simply a matter of taking out what settles on the bottom.
Biological filtration is needed. LR provide more than enough if your remove the bulk of the waste from the tank instead of trying to have a sewage treatment plant in the tank. This is the only pet I can think of that we consider keeping it in it's own waste "normal". Flush that toilet. :lol2:A skimmer goes a long way to doing this, but biological processing is still needed in a tank. I guess the only place we differ is how much biological processing surface is enough.
I disagree. I think you can have too much. When your biofiltration become a load on the system it is supposed to be filtering, then it is too much. Also, the additional complications and dangers associated with larger biofiltration are a concern to me.I just feel you can't have too much, and it may be possible to make a DSB and asset and not a detriment to reef keeping.
Absolutely. We also agree that sharing information and trying new things IS beneficial. Disagreement does not have to be followed with disrespect.We agree, it isn't going to be through disinformation.
Shoestring Reefer said:I have from 750 to 1000 gpm in my 55-gal, depending on how many powerheads I have turned on.
Whoops, that should have been 1000 gph, and I don't use eductors. I'll edit my post.ldrhawke said:I think you may be overstating the flow rates. I know you use eductors to boost flow, but a 1000 gpm...
ldrhawke said:I totally agree with get rid of the poop. But, over 50% of the detritus and bacterial detritus from animals in our tanks is p#ss, not poop. When I see my fish waste, very little if any ever reaches the bottom.
Shoestring Reefer said:I never realized how much of my sand bed was actually poop until I went BB.
Originally posted by Scleractinian BTW, ldrhawke, who was the quote from? [/B]