daveonbass
New member
sooooooo...your pellets "are" working then?. If yes, then you and I do NOT have the same problem. My pellets have never worked for me at all. :/
My nitrates never fluctuate,they always stay at 10. I still do 4 gallon w/c every Thursday.
Hi Dave,
My nitrates were 25 on the 23/7/10 so they have come down but I want them down further. If that is possible?
IMO bacterial bloom come from way to much bacteria in water column in short period of time, reason for my opinion is because in the past when I will start my diy reactor with higher amount of bio pellets, with 500 ml for example from the start I will get bacterial bloom next day but if I ad small amount of bp during weeks then I do not get bacterial bloom with 500 ml, is the same reactor so if there are carbon/pellets release in aquarium I should get bacterial bloom both time. Also people who use them in the bag and not in the reactor will get bacterial bloom all the time, siting in bag in the sump are actually pellets materials in tank water, not separated in the reactor.
" few days latter diy reactor create bacterial bloom and drop nitrate from 100 to 0,25 in few days"
I can see where a bacterial bloom would reduce nitrate quickly. I don't believe this is a safe practice IMHO, even though many hobbyists have experienced bacterial blooms while using these pellets without problems. The number of hobbyists' reports of bacterial blooms while using these products is alarming IMHO.
All bacteria do produce toxins as they grow and multiply. Some of these bacterial toxins are much more toxic than other bacterial toxins. If the bacterial specie that blooms in the water column produces highly toxic byproducts, then this could have drastic effects on your other organisms. The blooms rob oxygen from the water column. The effects on the coral symbionts could be negative and result in bleaching (expulsion) or worse yet cause changes in symbiont population species in the coral (some produce toxins which kill coral tissue). Just because this does not occur with the species of bacteria you have in your tank, it don't necessarily mean it can't occur for other hobbyists.![]()
Exactly what the effects on coral symbionts the organic chemicals released in the water column from these pellets is unknown. Obviously for a bacterial boom to occur in the water column, the reactor is releasing the pellet material into the tank water IMHO. I thought the major purpose for using solid pellets is to prevent this from occurring like when using liquid carbon sources?
jlinzmaier, sorry for late reply, I was and still was quite bussy last days.
Just for clarification, in most of my posts I specifically pointed that what I write are only my opinion, IMO, that actually mean that I could be wrong, I also noted that I am not a expert with bio pellets and even less with the chemistry things. Randy, Bertoni, Boomer, Clif, tmz...are here to teach us what can be going on with all chemistry involved in bio pellets or any other question asked in RC.
Answer also depend of personal presentation of questions or advice, so when I readed Cliff post most of my atention get this sentences:
the reactor is releasing the pellet material into the tank water IMHO
Did I get this wrong or not dont know, but my understending of those words is that bp release smal particles in water column and that create bacterial bloom, so reason for so manny bacterial bloom in aquarium can be tinny pellets material suspended in tank water. IMO, that is not the case because everyone who use bp in the bag not separated in reactor will have constant bacterial bloom, also from my expirience using bp with small adition weekly do not create bacterial bloom, if I get bloom when I start with 500 ml of bp I should get him also when I start slowly and reach critical mass of 500 ml bp, if I do not get him then issue IMO are not related with pellets material in the tank water. Only differences, at least how I see the diferences, is much more bacteria in very short period of time in aquarium what lead to bacterial bloom, most of my expriences show me that bacterial bloom start slowlly, first day water are cloudy but not so much like next days so they obviously multiple very fast in aquarium water. That is not happening when bp are added slowly and when bacteria multiple much slower.
That is how I see that issue.
Try inviting Goldilocks over[BToo many cause problems and too little cause problems. You need the amount just right. [/B]
so is it not possible that the bacteria blooms are just bacteria blooms. In this equasion it seems that we are all turning "reaction X" into "reason Z".
i.e. Bacterial bloom = carbon in water.
why not: bacterial bloom = BACTERIA in water?
is it possible that the carbon is not leaching into the water, and that just the bacteria is?
also I find it funny that jeremy thinks I should do more frequent waterchanges, and that mo thinks that by doing them I'm stripping the tank of the current nessicary bacteria. I can't win for losing...haha.