Randy Holmes-Farley
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My Tank Thread
Randy, I've never seen you jump in on a thread like this with so many oppinions and suspicions but not specific data. I really like much of what you contribute but this seems off for you. This product has been around for quite a while in our hobby and for me, and many others, it has more than proven itself and it's results. Do you have experience specific to this product? Your replies just seem odd to me.
Sorry my replies seem odd, but I only expressed one opinion (which, interestingly, matches your experience) and pointed out several facts based on the actual benepets description. Not sure how that is unusual or problematic.
My opinion:
"I’m skeptical of the whole concept of dosing organisms such as bacteria or phytoplankton to reduce nutrients, at least as an ongoing thing, but some folks seem to claim it works for them (others say no)."
Your experience:
"I've never heard that Benepets consumes PO4 only that it doesn't increase it. That has been my experience with it as well. I think i heard a few users say they saw reduction of PO4 but that seems to be an exception and not the rule from what I've read."
My fact based comments using their own statements:
Statement from them:
"Benereef doesn’t have a high protein content but rather a high carbohydrate content which is important because if you have a higher surplus of proteins and they are broken down you reach ammonia levels that are toxic to your system and reef inhabitants."
My comment #1
"Their ammonia toxicity comment leads me to have little confidence in their knowledge of reef tanks."
That statement of my personal lack of confidence in them cannot be incorrect, but I'm surprised that I'd need to justify it after posting that ammonia claim. Do any experienced reef aquarists believe that feeding foods with high protein will lead to ammonia levels so high that it causes toxicity? I have read hundreds of thousands of posts with reefers with all sorts of chemistry issues, and not once do i recall ever reading of anyone who had toxic levels of ammonia in an established reef tank for any reasons, and obviously not because they fed too much protein. In fact, dosing amino acids is a tried and true way to provide foods to some types of reef aquaria. No one gets toxic ammonia levels from doing that.
My Comment #2
"As to a food that is high in carbohydrate, that will spur bacterial growth just like sugar, ethanol, etc, and that has the potential to lower nutrients."
The only other comment that I think I made about this product is that a high carbohydrate food is that the high carbohydrate would likely be providing an organic carbon dosing effect. If one simply thought of it as a normal food plus extra carbohydrate, then that's exactly what some types of organic carbon dosing are. Reef Actif by Tropic Marin is a carbohydrate, for example, as are several fo teh DIY organic carbon dosing systems folks have used.