jlinzmaier
Premium Member
What is ATS?
Algae Turf Scrubber. It's a method to grow turf algae in an area where it can be pruned and removed as a means of nutrient export.
Jeremy
What is ATS?
For those of you use the NP pellets......can you please tell me what is the most common media reactor all of you are using? And how much I would need for a 180-gl DT? Also, does it have to tumble in the MR like GFO or Carbon; how much flow, etc? Any info or great tips would be a big help.
I read through over 40-pages of this thread and can not find an answer to these questions. This seems like a great way to help reduce nitrates and I would like to give a try if the upfront $$$ is not too high.
Many thanks.......
borcu, As I understand it the amount of bacterial food produced it too much. If it all goes to the DT then it will just break down and you GHA or some other algae. By going through the skimmer first a lot (maybe most) of the bacteria is skimmed of but some still makes it to the DT.
borcu, I am having a little rouble with the translation, but let me try. Realize I don't use this yet; I am only trying to understand what I read.
Bacteria grows on the media and the jumbling in the strong current sloughs some of the bacteria off. Three things can happens to this sloughed off bacteria:
The first two are good. The third is bad, IMHO. It will leave the carbon from it's structure around for cyano, green hair algae, and other 'bad things'. I also think that if way too much is released that it is what caused the cloudiness, ph drop, and lack of oxygen that has been reported.
- It can be eaten (coral, filter feeders)
- It can be skimmed out
- it can go into the main tank and decompose
the best argument in my case is that I have no PO4 to speak of...and there fore nothing for the bacteria to feed on in order to get rid of BOTH.
also working against me was the amount of NO3 to begin with. It seems that the pellets work best with a proper ratio of N and P, or just starting with lower levels to begin with.
Just understand.... you do not have zero PO4, you have zero free PO4 that shows up on a test in the water column. The bacteria will only grow to the levels that support them. They could indeed be PO4 limited, but zero PO4 on a test does not prove that.
I know there is a ratios....please correct... isn't it like 116:1 nitrate/PO4???? Anyway, my point is that that is the uptake ratio of bacteria, but I highly doubt that excess nitrate to that ratio is bad or causing any problems.
What are you measuring PO4 with???
same brand?Has anyone tried the new n/p reducing bio pellets they are a lot smaller than the original ones and are a lot easy to fluidise and heres the best bit there supose to be better at reducing phosphate than the previous ones
I got a bag today so iam going to remove my row phous from my other reactor and put the new pellets in this reactor