Because we know from research in waste treatment plants that bacteria exist that can live off such toxins as hydrogen sulfide. Do they exist in a DSB? Are there other bacteria that live in anoxic conditions that eat phosphate and do those bacteria live in a DSB? (P.S I challenge you to find the paper that shows that such bacteria do exist because in this case there is some research on the topic)
Show me one scientific paper where in DSBs or equivalent were tested in a controlled environment using proper scientific methodology and were shown to have released toxins. This is the heart of my complaint regarding your comments.
What works? How a DSB releases toxins? Where? Show me the "known science". What do you mean by known science? Look below for what scientific method means and see if you get at what I'm arguing.
Perhaps this is where you and I can simply agree to disagree. You are calling this statement "basic science". To me science means, use of scientific methodology.
Scientific Method (Wikipedia):
The scientific method (or simply scientific method) is a body of techniques for investigating phenomena, acquiring new knowledge, or correcting and integrating previous knowledge.[1] To be termed scientific, a method of inquiry must be based on empirical and measurable evidence subject to specific principles of reasoning
In the case you just listed you are saying an aquarium sand bed can be stirred up and the resulting cloud of detritus can kill it's inhabitants. Show me where this has been tested and explained. I stir up my tanks and create clouds of mess all the time, and I don't lose any corals. What is the mechanism you are claiming causes death? Lack of oxygen? Toxin release? If toxins what toxins were involved? Did they come from the sand bed or were they introduced through daily additives or food or aerosol sprayed in the room. Just because someone stirred a sand bed and corals died is not proof that DSB are toxic. This is science. No one has studied this because it costs money and time. It is taken as fact by many because it seems logical. It is NOT science.
This statement was made regarding "poo". Poo means feces. Feces do not collect on the bottom of a tank because it biodegrades rapidly into other organic and inorganic material. So to say "poo" collects on the bottom of a tank is patently false.
Exactly, and some genuine SCIENTISTS have posited logical THEORIES incorporating other scientific research as to why a DSB may be one method of controlling waste in an aquarium.
Here are some questions about DSB that perhaps you can answer.
1) What is the precise list of toxins that exist in all DSBs after 5 years?
2) How much of those toxins exist in relation to total system volume?
3) Does a 5 year old DSB release toxins and if so by what means? Dissolution? Ionic exchange? Gaseous release?
4) Do the toxins found in a DSB depend on system inputs, and if so how do the inputs change the toxins?
DSBs MAY be dangerous, and some anecdotal evidence exists to support this hypothesis, but this has never been proven through scientific method.
Joe :beer: