Curious as to why you would say plenums don't work MCsaxmaster?
What do we mean by "work" in this context? My contention is that, as shown by work by Toonen et al., they probably aren't doing much of anything in terms of affecting water quality.
It doesn't necessarily affect phosphate, but the setup & maintenance allows you to control phosphate from getting out of control in a negative way. Detritus, food, fish waste ect. will get into a DSB per gravity & continue to sink in over the years. This can lead to phosphate issues.
If you're vacuming the sandbed you don't have a traditional plenum system--you have a vacumed sandbed system
I'm curious what you have against waterflow. Giving the plenum waterflow causes it to become a benethic zone, which quickly populates with animals that help improve water quality.
Benthic means 'of or attached to the bottom of a body of water.' I'm not sure what you mean to say here...
that's what i thought, all animals need O2...not sure if it makes sense if someone says the hypoxic zone under a plenum is supposed to cultivate more nitrosonomas or nitorbacter...if there's no flow, hence no air, then it would be dead...maybe the secret is in adjusting to the right level of O2 flowing thru, to get the right colony or be able to sustain one under there...I'm not sure.
No, not all animals need O2. Many sediment-dwelling organisms rely on anaerabic metabolic pathways, and don't use O2. And by this I am not talking about bacteria--many bivalves, worms, and other large, substantial animals rely on anaerboic metabolic pathways in anoxic sediments.
An area becomes hypoxic or anoxic only because O2 demand exceeds supply. If there were no life in a tank--if it were just sterile water and sand--there would be no drop in the O2 below the plenum or in the sand no matter how long it sat there because nothind would be using the O2. Sediments on reefs in nature are usually oxic (high O2) only in the upper few mm or perhaps cm. They normally become hypoxic (due to high demand and limited supply) within a few cm and anoxic below a few cm. In really rich, organic sediments (think mangroves) the sediments normally become anoxic within mm of the surface since there is so much demand for O2.
Charles Delbeek had a plenum system setup for 5 years, with stats taken frequently. the plenum concept has indeed reduced black toxic sulphate spots compared to DSB's and also, saw a reduction in phosphates quite consistently...this was on an article he wrote on AQUARIUM magazine...
Ok, but we have no reason to think that the plenum had anything to do with low phosphate levels in the tank. We could just as easily claim that a particular fish in the tank, or coral, or snail, or whatever helped lead to low phosphates because they happened to be there...
Not all organisms need air. Anaerobic means without air. Anaerobic bacteria are what perform denitrification.
Agreed, see above. Also, just to clarify, while denitrifying bacteria use anaerobic metabolic pathways, not all anaerobic bacteria can cause denitrification. By the same token, all oak trees are plants but many plants are not oak trees.
Chris