Allmost
New member
Allmost- I didn't know English wasn't your mother tongue. Please don't take anything I posted too seriously. I hope I didn't offend you.
oh no in no way
I enjoy the discussion as well
Allmost- I didn't know English wasn't your mother tongue. Please don't take anything I posted too seriously. I hope I didn't offend you.
Bioload you are over thinking it. This is not an accusation, I am guilty as well of such things, but to answer your question all you have to do is plumb in a DSB bucket. Your fish will eat and generate waste. The bacteria on your rock will break down the ammonia and nitrite, nitrate will rise. Eventually your bucket bacteria will catch up and nitrate will fall. But to test if the bucket is really the thing removing your nitrate, remove the bucket from the system. That will show the positive or null effects of RDSB on nitrate control.
I am chasing a similar goal of using no mechanical filtration. No skimmer, no reactors just a single return pump. No substrate in the tank, no live rock, no macro algae, no water changes... Just plain sand. I will find the carrying capacity of my RDSB then increase its capacity if I still have not yet stocked the tank completely. I attend the Church of Keeping it Simple, I wish more people would as well.
Bioload you are over thinking it. This is not an accusation, I am guilty as well of such things, but to answer your question all you have to do is plumb in a DSB bucket. Your fish will eat and generate waste. The bacteria on your rock will break down the ammonia and nitrite, nitrate will rise. Eventually your bucket bacteria will catch up and nitrate will fall. But to test if the bucket is really the thing removing your nitrate, remove the bucket from the system. That will show the positive or null effects of RDSB on nitrate control.
I am chasing a similar goal of using no mechanical filtration. No skimmer, no reactors just a single return pump. No substrate in the tank, no live rock, no macro algae, no water changes... Just plain sand. I will find the carrying capacity of my RDSB then increase its capacity if I still have not yet stocked the tank completely. I attend the Church of Keeping it Simple, I wish more people would as well.
bioload, are you going to have a fast flow over the top? If so then I think I would disagree with Allmost. The only difference is that you are sampling a drop a second. That could be nor worse than a bed in a fuge with a poor seal on the baffles.
If not would you be interested in changing your design?I would love to know the results.
think about it for a min
if high flow on top, then the bucket would overflow
so one drop on top = one drop at bottom
now bioload, you got me thinking lol, I will think to see if I can come up with some way to test it. the simplest way, would be to set up a RDSB in a bucket, if your no3 is 100PPM, I will bet you in 2-3 weeks (less than a month) you will see it drop to half that value. (I see it happen alot), then you can remove the RDSB, and see how fast your no3 would rise. so if you are at 50PPM then reomve the RDSB, and 2 days later you are on 100PPM again, then the RDSB was removing 25 PPM of no3 daily from your tank.
but that's gonna shock everyone, so I will think about another way to test this trully, I KNOW DSBs work, and I like what you are doingwe do need a reasoning and some data for this to show others.
Allmost not sure I follow "on drop on top = on drop on bottom". I assumed bio load would add an outlet so the bucket would not over flow. Basically I am saying build a DSB in a bucket. Then add a tap at the bottom for his 1 drop per second. I would think this loss of a drop would not affect behavior of the DSB enough to affect any measurements. Especially if the DSB is deep enough to clear be in the non oxygen range (anerobic? - always get mixed so lets not confuse anyone too much) where the drop is coming from.
Allmost not sure I follow "on drop on top = on drop on bottom". I assumed bio load would add an outlet so the bucket would not over flow. Basically I am saying build a DSB in a bucket. Then add a tap at the bottom for his 1 drop per second. I would think this loss of a drop would not affect behavior of the DSB enough to affect any measurements. Especially if the DSB is deep enough to clear be in the non oxygen range (anerobic? - always get mixed so lets not confuse anyone too much) where the drop is coming from.
More oxygen in the top levels of the DSB will only drive denitrification deeper into the sediments. It is not optimal to have denitrification occurring in oxygen depleted sediment, it is more favorable to have it in low oxygen environments. This is why the depth of the sand bed, and the overlying flow are key factors in designing an optimized and highly functional DSB.High flow may be counterproductive in close proximity to the DSB with regards to dissolved oxygen
Hi all,
I've recently started a new tank that is about 6 weeks old. This is a brief summary of the tank to date:
Volume - 75gal
Rock - 20lbs live 30lbs dry
Substrate - None
Livestock - 2 Clowns, a Tang and a pair of Coral Banded Shrimp
Filtration - Marineland Emperor 400 BioWheel Filter
Water changes - None to date
The tank has been through it's initial ammonia and nitrite rise and fall with nitrate now being my primary focus, which I would like to be able to control and better understand before I start adding any corals to the tank.
I looked near and far for information regarding Natural Nitrate reduction......... just when you thought you had enough information on the nitrogen cycle.
The Aquarium Nitrogen Cycle
What is the Nitrogen Cycle
Nitrosomonas
Nitrosomonas
Nitrifying Bacteria Facts
Nitrobacter
What does a Bio filter and a Denitrification filter do?
Anaerobic Respiration
Anaerobic wastewater treatment reviewed
Advanced Wastewater Treatment
Wastewater Management Fact Sheet - Denitrifying Filters
Denitrification - Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant
Denitrification
Denitrification Filter
Wastewater Treatment with Methanol Denitrification
Deep Bed Denitrification Filters Play Role in Improved Wastewater Quality
Investigation into Methanol as a Carbon Source for Denitrification
Vodka Dosing...Distilled!
Aqua Medic Nitrate reductor
Nitrates in Marine Aquarium Systems
FAQs on Marine Water Quality involving Nitrates
Biological Filtration
Nutrient Control and Export: Ways to Increase Water Quality and Eliminate Nuisance Algae in Marine Aquaria
An Introduction to Deep Sand Beds
Hourly and Daily Variation of Sediment Redox Potential in Tidal Wetlands Sediment
Effect of Alternate Aerobic and Anaerobic Conditions on Redox Potential
The Food of Reefs, Part 6: Particulate Organic Matter
ORP and the Reef Aquarium
Hydrogen Sulfide and the Reef Aquarium
DSB in a bucket for nitrate control
In my search to gain a better understanding of the process, I thought this may be a good opportunity to look at nitrate specifically and it's removal since my tank is in it's early stages. The articles above raised as many questions for me as they answered.
That said, I would like to set up a remote deep sand bed and monitor/document specifically its effect on nitrate in my system. Based on what I've read results have been mixed.....surprised? My nitrate reading currently are 80-100 API test kit (any recommendations on test kits/monitors would be appreciated as well).
The first thing I would like to know is how long would it generally take for NNR to occur in live rock, so that any observed reduction can be attributed directly to the RDSB. If I were to add a RDSB right now, and I noticed a reduction in nitrates, would it be safe to assume that the reduction was due to the addition of the DSB, or was it some other process that was happening within the rock that I was not aware of.
Secondly, and more important, I would like to know how the flow within a DSB would effect NNR. Has anyone done any trials using a flow through RDSB, or any studies regarding the flow.
Any feedback on the subject would also be great. Hope to have the RDSB in place soon and interested in seeing what happens.
P.S. links are always appreicated (and always read......eventually).
With your sand getting absolutely zero flow I can see how a DSB would rank last in your list. I really wouldn't even call it a DSB as in context of the OPs discussion, it's a refugium with a lot of sand on the bottom. I would guess that even a bucket DSB has more denitrifying power than your system's sand bed does. The fact that you have algae growth shows that you have excess nutrients (nitrate) that are not being removed by the bacteria filtration alone. I am not saying your system doesn't work, it obviously does, but as I said it is not in context of the OPs experiment of how effectively a functioning DSB removes nitrate....
finally a dsb....
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With your sand getting absolutely zero flow I can see how a DSB would rank last in your list. I really wouldn't even call it a DSB as in context of the OPs discussion, it's a refugium with a lot of sand on the bottom. I would guess that even a bucket DSB has more denitrifying power than your system's sand bed does. The fact that you have algae growth shows that you have excess nutrients (nitrate) that are not being removed by the bacteria filtration alone. I am not saying your system doesn't work, it obviously does, but as I said it is not in context of the OPs experiment of how effectively a functioning DSB removes nitrate.