As the "carbon dosing" discussion emerges on RC, driven largely by hobbyists who have never applied either a carbon dosing or bacterioplankton strategy (two entirely different concepts, with the single strand of "carbon dosing" in common), nor bothered to do the academic research ... it is perhaps a good thing to try to keep the fundamental information well-grounded in
the science.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7354640#post7354640 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by MiddletonMark
... [sugar/vodka/etc ... all the same]. ....
In terms of the research literature, the assertion that growth media are "all the same" is ... no offense ... simply inaccurate. While it is true that many unspecified carbohydrates ("sugar") and ethanol (vodka) are used by a vast array of bacterial strains for growth ... different bacterial strains utilize different growth media in ways which can demonstrate
radically different biomass growth rates, nutrient assimilation rates, and oxygen consumption rates.
You don't need to accept my opinion on this ... do your own reading and decide for yourself. I would urge anyone considering the inclusion of "carbon dosing" in their husbandry practices to do at least
some background research.
Perhaps this literature reference post may be of some use to you ...
http://www.zeovit.com/forums/showpost.php?p=61104&postcount=17
"The Bacteria Thread" itself can be accessed using this link ...
http://www.zeovit.com/forums/showthread.php?t=5364 .
The science literature search engine which consistently yields the most comprehensive set of results is SCIRUS ...
http://www.scirus.com/srsapp/advanced/index.jsp . The combination of keywords "bacteria" and "marine", along with whatever growth media interests you ... glucose, succinate, ethanol, methanol, glutamate, acetate, iron, sulfur ...
whatever ... should produce results of interest.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7354640#post7354640 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by MiddletonMark
... If you can't control nutrients without carbon dosing - then you need to figure out why you're importing so much ...
I couldn't agree more ... this is fundamental, excellent advice (IMO). In terms of nitrate respiration and phosphorous uptake, the whole "point" of carbon dosing is to create an environment which is not carbon-limited, but IS nitrogen-limited. If you can't get control of nitrogen inputs, dosing a carbon source cannot,
in and of itself, take a system to a place where NO3 and PO4 are assimilated in a stable and predictable manner.
Within the context of "cooking LR", all that dosing a carbon source is going to do is cause a short-term, rapid increase in heterotrophic bacterial biomass. If you're not doing a simultaneous bacterial inoculation in the presence of assimilated nutrient export via skimming, I don't see any particular advantage to such a tactic. JMO.
HTH
