Aquarist007
New member
ThankCapn fro bring your observations and keeping this thread relevent. I apologize ahead of time for my rambling thoughts, I had back surgery last week and am still heavily medicated, so my thought process's are hindered.
Hi Jack
Hope you are feeling better.
My thoughts from the article--sorry for not returing your post earlier but IMO there should be a discussion of it which does not seem to have happened here.
1. From first hand experience I feel that the skimmers function is to remove dead bacteria from the system.
Now I believe that dead bacteria does not thrive in the bacteria film and thus the skimmer will be affective in reducing it
The article did not mention where the bacteria counts were just live bacteria, dead or a combination of both.
Thus it is difficult to conclude from that article that the skimmer is not affective in reducing the dead populations of bacteria.
2. We are aware that the bacteria exist and multiply etc in a biofilm. Again how is the measurement of this taken since these bacteria are not water borne.
3."My experience agrees somewhat, but do we want the flow so high that bacteria leave the reactor in large quantities from being sloughed off or do we want to contain them as much as possible? Only asking here, because I have run high flow and low flow and have recently been just running them in the bottom of a canister filter and have found no difference in keeping my parameters in check. High flow did however cause the pellets to lose size much faster."
This has been much in debate in my area(Southern Ontario)
Do you run the pellets in a reactor or cannister or just in a bag in the sump.
One very experienced reefer and respected colleague runs the pellets in a bag in the sump--when I questioned this he stated that in order for nitrate reduction the bacteria had to be in an anerobic condition and that this was negated by pellets moving quickly in an external reactor.
I would really appreciate a discussion by you and others on this point.