Aquarist007
New member
Skimming will ,however. take out the bacteria that consume the acetate.
Thanks Tom
Good to be back on here..been in Naples since Xmas
Is this really a concern given the nitrifying and denitrifying bacteria are not water borne
Skimming will ,however. take out the bacteria that consume the acetate.
Not a concern but they do move in the water column .Exporting them is how the nutrients are removed.
Well, the bacteria take out nitrogen as well as phosphate .Nitogne from ammonia and/or N from nitrate via assimialtion. The nitrate reduction is not just a result of N2 gas bubbling out.
And if you don't mind to add that it seems that there is bacteria called Polyphosphate-accumulating organisms (PAOs) prone to accumulate polyphosphates in their cells in aerobic conditions using acetate as carbon food source. This may explain why directly adding acetate could help phosphate reduction.Well, the bacteria take out nitrogen as well as phosphate .Nitogne from ammonia and/or N from nitrate via assimialtion. The nitrate reduction is not just a result of N2 gas bubbling out.
Alright, what is everybody doing with the bacteria growing in the reactors and clogging everything up??? I can go maybe 7 days tops before the bacteria completely clogs my sponges in the GFO and GAC reactors. I can remove the sponges out of my GAC and get it to last longer but not my gfo. You can't take the sponges out or it will go everywhere. The bottom sponge gets clogged up with bacteria and then it floats to the top with the media and against the top sponge and therefore can't tumble.
I dose nopox in my sump by my return pump. My return pump then pumps through a manifold which supplies all my reactors. Any suggestions??? I'm not going to continually pay to replace GFO every 7 days, besides the pain in the butt.
And if you don't mind to add that it seems that there is bacteria called Polyphosphate-accumulating organisms (PAOs) prone to accumulate polyphosphates in their cells in aerobic conditions using acetate as carbon food source. This may explain why directly adding acetate could help phosphate reduction.
I think acetate will be consumed and/or degraded ;ultimately to methane in nature.
0.002ppm PO4 is very low and could cause difficulty for anemones and clams. I don't know what you mean by extra carbon dosing . I have entmacea quadricolor and have had tridacna maxima florush with moderate organic carbon dosing and PO4 levels in the 0.02 ppm to 0.1ppm range with nitrate readings from 0.2 to 1pmm. Fast drops in PO4 seem top harm clams even more than corals.
Hi, i am planning to dose vinegar for reducing nitrates. I purchased a bottle of white vinegar from a grocery store and its ingredients are Acetic acid, water, sugar and salt. Is it fine to use it? Plus it does not state the % of acetic acid.
Yes, and smells terribleIt needs to be handled carefully since it's concentrated and can burn you.