Paul B
Premium Member
I had a sand bed in a tank for right at 10 years before I finally tore it down last fall to upgrade to a larger tank. Though I'm not sure it qualified as a "DSB" since it seems to be a rather broad term. It contained anywhere from 1" to 3"
Tulsa, conisidentially, the author said to me that 1' to 3" for a DSB is perfect. That is not really the depth of a DSB he is talking about.
I think more like 4" and deeper, acording to the author "may" be a problem.
He also did not say that this will always happen in a deeper bed, although I don't know why.
As for live rock, I happen to disagree with him on that point and feel you can't have too much live rock. I don't think rock and deep sand would qualify as the same thing. But much of my rock is hollow because I built it like that. Not for nitrate reduction which I diden't think about at the time, but just because it is easier tio build like that.
Capn, Bob seems to think from his research or more likely, the research of the people he quotes that this problem with the anerobic bacteria in deeper areas where there is almost no oxygen at all harbors bacteria slightly different from the anerobic bacteria we have always known about that just turn nitrate into nitrogen gas which disapates out of the water. This other bacteria convert the nitrogen gas back again into ammonium which the shallower bacteria again convert back into nitrates.
I am only posting the article I did not write it but I feel that too many DSBs have nitrogen problems where there should be none.
This sounds like a plausable theory to me other wise, where is the nitrate coming from in a tank with a DSB?
Again, if a DSB is not working and we have a nitrogen problem, what exactly is the DSB doing?
There should be way more nitrates in my tank than a tank with a DSB and that is not always the case. Maybe this theory
(which I did not write) is true.
:smokin: