If I am understanding correctly, the anti-DSB crowd believes that unmaintained DSBs are deadly phosphate sinks that will cause a tank to someday "crash" due to unleashing gobs of deadly phosphate into the tank.
Did I get that correct?
1) Many SPS tanks exist with old DSBs that have not "crashed".
2) The premise is wrong as explained by the venerable R H-F:
I don't care about phosphate at all and never tested for it. I think DSBs will fail just because they will not process anything much longer than ten years.
And you don't have to keep apologizing, we all have different opinions and we are all right and wrong at the same time. Byt who really cares? It is a hobby and we are not sending space shuttles to fight off aliens, not yet anyway.
According to Shimek there are worms and I think he calls them critters that constantly tunnel through a DSB and there by keep it slightly porous so the water can get down to the lower areas and get processed. To me this will not work. The lower layers of a DSB are supposed to have no oxygen so those worms will not go there. Anerobic bacteria will stay there for a while but even they will die off from lack of food. It just can't work for long, but even if I am wrong about that, and I may be because I am not the God of DSBs, those worms will not reproduce forever. Most miniscule creatures have a very short lifespan, maybe just a few weeks and in the limited space of a tank, eventually inbreeding alone will lessen the population and they will stop reproducing. I would imagine you could somehow buy these things (I doubt it) but even if you could, there is that, no oxygen problem again and the lower layers will get no water flow.
If you take a 10 year old DSB and drill a hole in the bottom of the tank, water will not even leak out because the sand grains will be compacted. I have not tried this and I don't think anyone will volunteer so my theory is safe for now.
Even in the sea where I collect organisms I see this. If I remove the top inch or so of sand at low tide I will find hydrogen sulfide, it is very common because the sand here in NY is very fine. But if I dig much further the sand is again clean even though there is no oxygen there. It is clean because even the bacteria that produce hydrogen sulfide can't live in the lower layers due to lack of food.
This is the area I am talking about. The anerobic bacteria do not live from a few inches below the surface all the way to China. The sea has a DSB and even in the sea it doesn't work as Dr Shimek reports.
It's just my theory, I am sure there are some DSBs older than ten years but the vast majority crashed way before that.
Again, not the God of DSBs just an old, bald retired electrician.