- Joined
- Sep 21, 2018
- Messages
- 7,571
- Reaction score
- 7,962
Literature on dosing a carbon source to bring down ammonia and nitrate can be found in the waste water treatment and recirculated aquaculture literature. Carbon dosing is not recognized as a phosphate reduction method because too little phosphate is removed. As for aquarium use, I haven’t come across scientific studies on this subject. Explanations about how carbon dosing works in aquaria seems to be inferred from waste water treatment and recirculated aquaculture studies.These are just some thoughts I had when I recently started carbon dosing. You have all read it before; the idea is to add a carbon source, which feeds the otherwise carbon-limited population of bacteria, which causes a reduction in N and P. And bacteria get skimmed out by the skimmer. But how much scientific evidence is there for this mechanism?
Just one observation: Why does the skimmer go bonkers when vinegar dosing? When I added bottle bacteria before, this did not happen. Does vinegar act as a flocculant instead?
The foaming that occurs soon after addition of vinegar is likely an organic compound in the vinegar.
Also, the sheer mass of skimmed bacteria must be really high to reduce N and P significantly. When you have a refugium, you can grab a couple of handfuls of chaeto, and its dry weight is considerable. We know approx. the N and P content of chaeto and, hence, we know how much N and P we are removing. But if you were to dry out the skimmate, I wonder if you would get a lot of dry-weight substance out.
This a good point that is rarely brought up about when discussing the role of skimming. Bacteria dry weight mass removal by skimming is very small compared to the dry weight of macro algae used to control nitrate. I am not sure anyone has ever checked that enough macro algae mass is being generated to account for the reduced nitrate.
Perhaps many of the organisms that you grow with vinegar do not need to leave via the skimmate? Then, you could imagine binding up N and P in sponges and rock-bound bacteria. Anyhow, these are some thoughts to start a critical discussion. References to literature would be useful. @Randy Holmes-Farley @Lasse @taricha @Dan_P.
Good points. Nitrate could be leaving via reduction to nitrogen (see Lasse post) as well as becoming biomass in the aquarium. I don’t recall seeing anyone calculating the amount of biomass produced per ppm of nitrate removed. I suspect the generated biomass could not be visually detected. The dry weight of the white biofilm noted in some dosing situations probably isn’t enough to account for the nitrate reduction.
My feeling is that several mechanisms are responsible for removing nitrate when organic carbon is added to an aquarium.