<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=6501859#post6501859 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Sindjin
Actually. IMO its the rock thats releaseing PO4....thats where the algae is. This is why, also IMO, that Rock Cooking becomes evidentally more important.
Ok, I've been reading this thread and have a point to make.
PO4 is imported from any number of sources, including feeding fish, adding phyto to the tank, etc. You
will have phosphate coming in to a reef tank in some amount. It's mostly unavoidable.
Now, algae needs light and phosphate, as we all know. To get rid of algae in a lighted tank, you must reduce available phosphate in the system. This means having a means of constantly
exporting phosphate from the system, and keeping the level low. You must avoid recycling phosphate back into the water. Algae is merely a temporary vessel for the phosphate - it is not the sickness, it is the symptom. Therefore, buying a fish to eat algae and poop phosphate back into the system is not a solution. It's like using a cow to stop grass from growing. Similarly, using macroalgae to "tie up" phosphate is not a strong solution without heavy macro export (but is still a wild card, IMO).
Consider the reverse scenario - remove the light from the system. Obviously, the algae dies, but phosphate in the dying algae returns to the system. We also know phosphate
is stored in rock in some form, since "cooking" rock causes a rock to shed detritus, which presumably contains some PO4. Without removing the phosphate from either of the above sources, turning the light back on cranks up algae growth again.
We all agree at this point that both DSB and BB can succeed given they are run properly. We know DSB and BB can handle breaking down ammonia and all that - I think the most common problem is phosphate. That said, I know how a BB system deals with phosphate. The system is initially setup to be "phosphate-starved" and detritus is kept in suspension and wet-skimmed away, or removed via water changes and direct removal (vaccuuming).
My big question about DSB's is simple: what is the "right way" to ensure that phosphate is constantly exported? In a BB tank, detritus is ideally removed by removing detritus before it breaks down and releases bound phosphate. A BB tank should not allow detritus to sit idle
anywhere - no pile of rocks in the sump, no sandy refugium, no sponges, no filter sock... no detritus! In a DSB, detritus
does sit idle and decays, by design, releasing phosphate into the water. What is the phosphate-export function in a DSB? Whether detritus decays on top of the sandbed, or in the sandbed, I can't figure out how I'm supposed to get phosphate out of the water before the algae beats me to it.
Can someone point me to some reference explaining this part?
Over the past decade, I've heard volumes of bad advise. I've done things "the wrong way" with both BB and DSB, and I know they both can fail, but phosphate problems are the one part of a DSB that keeps the sand out of my tank.