<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8357780#post8357780 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by cpatbay
Are you saying that mechanical filtering, even if the filter media is replaced every couple of weeks, is a bad idea? I would think that if one changes the media often, the "nitrate factory" would be wiped out constantly to be a problem.
The idea of using filter medium, whether it be bio-balls, filter floss, foam, etc. becoming a "nitrate factory" is the popular wisdom in reef-keeping. I've read it in books and countless posts here in RC and to an extent, I'm accepting it as correct since the sources of this information are credible. I have also seen posts here in RC by people who report using medium of one kind or another, that their nitrates are consistently at zero. I don't know of, and would like to see, the results of a serious study on the issue. I can say that I have set up my reef in a way which doesn't include any filter medium and even with having added a sizeable refugium, while it did drop them down significantly, only the addition of a sulfur denitrifier brought them down to negligible.
So, while I did say that using medium may well be part or even all of the cause of John&Lynn’s nitrate problem, I am not positive from my own experience that this is the case. It is definitely, IMO, something to consider, though, if nitrates are elevated and filter medium is in use.
I would have to say that if the filter medium is washed out frequently like you suggest, cpatbay, I don’t see how it could get to a stage where they would foster elevated nitrates.
Still, I don’t see the need for any filter medium of any kind, if there is sufficient live rock and a good quality protein skimmer running on the reef. It’s less maintenance at any rate than any kind of filter medium would require.