Righty":10022jm6 said:
Lest we fall into polarization, I think it is important to note that there are many who didn't fall into the myth expressed above, but still like sand in their tanks.
Righty, most certainly. And at risk of polarizing, unfortunately, Rustysnail’s post is a perfect example of that perpetuated husbandry based on myth.
Rustysnail":10022jm6 said:
But also let me say that lots of what has been brought to the table by others are strictly hypothetical as well (keep that in mind when you read the various debates).
If you cared to look, many of the hypotheses you speak of have been supported by peer reviewed, experimental data.
Rustysnail":10022jm6 said:
First, if you look at a system with a DSB, you notice that there is much more 'life' in there than a non-DSB tank. With the abundance of micro-organisms creates a much broader food 'web', and should therefore add stability to a system.
Please read my other posts in this thread.
Rustysnail":10022jm6 said:
When pods and other critters reproduce they provide plankton that is vital to corals, particularly SPS.
Most of the corals hobbyists label as “SPS” are farmers. They can rely wholly on what their zooxanthellae produce and take up trace amounts of nitrogen and phosphorous from both their symbiont’s metabolism and the water column to translate and transcribe proteins. They also culture bacteria by trapping suspended particulates. None of these “SPS” are adept at capturing the kinds of plankton that spawning and DSB infauna or epifauna would hypothetically be producing.
Rustysnail":10022jm6 said:
You might think of a DSB as a nutrient 'sink'; but I think of it more as a habitat for sandbed oganisms to grow/reproduce.
…and regenerate nutrients. There’s just no getting around this.
Rustysnail":10022jm6 said:
The steady increase in population of organisms in the sandbed is what 'sinks' the free nutrients in your system.
And what regenerates them into your system.
Also, bacteria would be the only truly efficient biological sinks. They are the only organisms that can get to the necessary populations and they are the bottom of the ladder.
Rustysnail":10022jm6 said:
When a DSB 'releases' nutrients it is simply the leaking of nutrients out of nutritive silts.
And you like that idea? In a system where succession to algae who thrive when those nutrient concentrations are present in the slightest could happen, and whose target organisms are poisoned and stunted by them?
Rustysnail":10022jm6 said:
Please note that I am NOT calling this stuff detritus, it is further reduced than that already.
No, it’s not. It has nutrients, it has bacterial flock, it’s detritus.
Rustysnail":10022jm6 said:
Or maybe addition of a phosphate reduction system would be the way to go (planted fuge, sponge fuge, or the UV breakdown method?)
Regarding the planted fuge idea, again, read my other posts in this thread. UV and offgas are only effective on what they actually contact. Most phosphate exchange takes place in a very localized scenario and involves metabolically expensive enzymes, it’s highly coveted stuff. If it’s fluxing at sand/water interface, you aren’t going to beat the algae. They have a lot of evolution and strategy going for them on this, and they won’t miss a chance to take up any free phosphate. Cyanobacteria and diatoms are the best at this, and all we have to do (and have done) is look at a phytoplankton profile in oligotrophic waters to know this. Although, many hobby tanks have served to support this
Rustysnail":10022jm6 said:
What about using corals that are thought to uptake phosphate directly (some LPS) to achieve this?
All scleractinians are capable of this. Based on phosphate uptake kinetics in experiments, most of them rely on it pretty heavily in a closed system. But they only do at concentrations that are limiting. Uptake actually slows to a stop as concentrations rise. And they still regenerate it.
Rustysnail":10022jm6 said:
(formerly known as a 'true Berlin' system).
The system I described has never been called that. We call them equal export systems.