This quote summarises my current understanding of nutrient reduction with biopellets:
Can I dose N (not NO3) to make biopellets reduce PO4 further, and achieve a 10:1 ratio?
For example, I could dose ATI nutrition N, or Tropic Marin Amino-Organic (the latter contains organic nitrogen compounds).
I realise that if that were possible then more people would be doing that, and certainly I might be missing something really obvious, but I'm just not sure why I can't/shouldn't tweak the ratio of nutrients to alter their eventual ratio after reduction by bacteria.
What am I missing?
Thanks a lot!
If biopellets reduce N and P in a 16:1 ratio, then it follows that by providing excessive nitrogen (not NO3), phosphate should be reduced further, while nitrate should still be at an undetectable level.Biopellets tend toward the reduction of nitrates by boosting the organisms that feed on them. Phosphates will naturally reduce by a certain amount in relationship to the reduction of nitrates. That is somewhere around a 16:1 ratio, whereby a reduction of 16 parts of nitrate will see a reduction of 1 part of phosphate.
With biopellet systems, we’re reducing nitrates at a level faster than we can reduce phosphates. Nitrates will often become undetectable when using solid carbon dosing such as what we are accomplishing with biopellets. The remaining phosphates, then, become food for cyanobacteria if it is not skimmed from the water column. It is imperative that the hobbyist remove phosphates from the system at a level that matches that of the nitrate reduction. (https://blog.marinedepot.com/2014/05/biopellets-beginners-guide.html)
Can I dose N (not NO3) to make biopellets reduce PO4 further, and achieve a 10:1 ratio?
For example, I could dose ATI nutrition N, or Tropic Marin Amino-Organic (the latter contains organic nitrogen compounds).
I realise that if that were possible then more people would be doing that, and certainly I might be missing something really obvious, but I'm just not sure why I can't/shouldn't tweak the ratio of nutrients to alter their eventual ratio after reduction by bacteria.
What am I missing?
Thanks a lot!