This term is very often being banded about and i wanted to see what peoples opinion on it was?
I see it daily being attributed to poor old filter floss, foam, ceramic noodles, sintered glass etc........in that you cant have them in a reef as they just somehow release nitrates........
Now forgive me if i am wrong and please put me in my place - but bacteria will grow on any suitable, available surface in an aquarium (glass, sand, rock, filter covers etc. etc. etc) and will grow in numbers to suit the available "food" in the the form of nitrogenous wastes..........
So bacteria will only grow to the point where there is a diminishing return - in that there will only be the bacteria in proportion to the availble food.
Now i see it that any detritus that is being trapped in these media - this is being kept from the critters, worms, bugs, pods etc that would otherwise eat it - and as it decays it will release more and more nitrogenous waste - and the levels of nitrate will go up and up.........But this is not the result of the foam etc - but is actually due to the aquarist being tardy in their daily/weekly maintenance.....
On the opposite hand i do consider super efficient filtration such as trickle towers and possibly fluidised sand filters as producing more nitrate than the denitrifying bacteria in the live rock can deal with - and as such nitrates can only rise - more so than they would if these supper efficent filters were not in place........
In either case - you dont really need to use other forms of biological media when dealing with an adequately rock stocked aquarium...........so the "nitrate factory" terminology has been adopted instead of explaining how the nitrogen cycle works under different filtration regimes.......
Am i completly wrong?
Discuss.............:tongue:
I see it daily being attributed to poor old filter floss, foam, ceramic noodles, sintered glass etc........in that you cant have them in a reef as they just somehow release nitrates........
Now forgive me if i am wrong and please put me in my place - but bacteria will grow on any suitable, available surface in an aquarium (glass, sand, rock, filter covers etc. etc. etc) and will grow in numbers to suit the available "food" in the the form of nitrogenous wastes..........
So bacteria will only grow to the point where there is a diminishing return - in that there will only be the bacteria in proportion to the availble food.
Now i see it that any detritus that is being trapped in these media - this is being kept from the critters, worms, bugs, pods etc that would otherwise eat it - and as it decays it will release more and more nitrogenous waste - and the levels of nitrate will go up and up.........But this is not the result of the foam etc - but is actually due to the aquarist being tardy in their daily/weekly maintenance.....
On the opposite hand i do consider super efficient filtration such as trickle towers and possibly fluidised sand filters as producing more nitrate than the denitrifying bacteria in the live rock can deal with - and as such nitrates can only rise - more so than they would if these supper efficent filters were not in place........
In either case - you dont really need to use other forms of biological media when dealing with an adequately rock stocked aquarium...........so the "nitrate factory" terminology has been adopted instead of explaining how the nitrogen cycle works under different filtration regimes.......
Am i completly wrong?
Discuss.............:tongue: