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Rover":2rsr9pta said:Just a question. Are you saying that a bio wheel will create higher nitrates? Shouldn't the nitrate level be balanced by the ammonia excreted? (i.e. three fish should excrete the same amount of ammonia regardless of the method of filtration). I've heard trickle filters and power filters both referred to as "nitrate factories", but you can't create something if you don't have enough materials (ie ammonia). So xxx amount of food goes in, is eaten and xxx amount is excreted as ammonia, which is then coverted through the nitrogen cycle to xxx amount of nitrate which is dependent on the amount of ammonia produced regardless of the method of filtration. I will agree that live rock, deep sand bed, and a skimmer is the best way to go, from a biodiversity standpoint, based on the increase in habitat availabilty, but in the presence of regular water changes (to reduce the nitrates) shouldn't the nitrogen cycle behave the same? Or is it the tendency of power filters and trickles to trap detritus which slowly decays over time causing the need for ever increasingly large water changes to keep nitrates in check?
?i have had an experience with a tank i had in the past that i couldn't seem to get nitrates down to an exceptable level (small, young 55g tank without DSB). i added a biowheel that had been running on another tank as an experiment and nitrates did go down. of course this isn't proof, just one circumstance, but the reasoning seems sound to me. if there's no trapped organics, why would nitrates increase
agree with you but you should get the same effect by using a biowheel with a dsb. It doesn't matter where the nitrates come from the dsb will still convert it.....The important part is having something in the equation to deal with the nitrates (i.e. a dsb).
Obviously you may have greater nitrate producing ability with live rock because of more surface area for the aerobic bacterias, which makes live rock something of a nitrate factory too.
so it may actually be a good idea to run them in conjunction with a dsb/lr set up in a smaller tank, where an accidental overfeeding can have a proportionately greater chance of creating an ammonia spike-it will also ensure a high dissolved O2 level in the water, with the pleated cartridges exposing a large surface area of the water to the air as it turns
Podman":1igbjth1 said:i am a little hung up on something else here.
someone somewhere along the way told me that the reason wet/ dry filters created elevated levels of nitrate in the tank was due to the accumulation of organics. is that in any way accurate?
Is this not also accomplished with a sump/refugium?
I also do weekly water changes but would adding a bio-wheel be beneficial?
In theory would I not be converting ammonia to nitrates to nitrogen more efficiently w/out the worry of overfeeding?
As you can see I am always worried I am overfeeding.