CiXeL":2kz55g0k said:i find my nassarius snails dont stir the sand well enough. i have plenty of deritus in there that keeps feeding cyano and does it regardless of the amount of light or flow i throw at it. if i stir it out it actually sits around looking like a brownish powder. the sand comes alive after i stir it. but i definately believe you need to stir your sand because it will get nasty enough in pockets that no critters want to even get near it.
LordNikon":1idji9ih said:Stirring the sand is ok..every once in awhile..use a power head..it gets the detritus up and about..its a good thing for the filtration so it could suck it up..it also benefits the filter feeders...My clark clown has a nasty habit of doing this <stirring up the sand>
vitz":3k6xax2u said:the reason why 'stirring' up the sand bed w/a powerhead is a very bad idea is the resulting disturbing of the various 'zones' that form in strata in the sand bed
the snails, cukes, et al that we call 'stirrers' don't exactly 'stir'.
it's more of a very gentle tunneling through, than it is a stirring.it occurs slowly enough so the various organism's preffered strata isn't ruined faster than they can adapt/migrate to
overturning aerobic zones and anoxic, anaerobic ones willy nilly is a great recipe for never letting an sb stabilize and mature properly
vitz":3exhjzy4 said:i refer to the establishment of the various 'zones/strata' of the sb, each of which supports different fauna from the most highly aerobic at the surface, to the highly anoxic near the bottom
if the anoxic zone is suddenly turned over and exposed to high O2 levels, what do you think happens to the anoxic (denitrifying) bacteria ?
mikesroth":1hvfgjbr said:Righty, could you post it in here. I would be curious to read up on it too.
Thanks....
Righty":lsdgq9nw said:vitz":lsdgq9nw said:i refer to the establishment of the various 'zones/strata' of the sb, each of which supports different fauna from the most highly aerobic at the surface, to the highly anoxic near the bottom
IIRC, it doesn't really work that way. The zones are more like pockets that aren't static, but move throughout the bed.
if the anoxic zone is suddenly turned over and exposed to high O2 levels, what do you think happens to the anoxic (denitrifying) bacteria ?
You can get problems - which is why I don't advocate 'stirring' beds that have been sitting a long time.
vitz said:our memories differ, then![]()
in a sand bed 5" or greater, i'm fairly certain that stratification has to occur, both w/regards to the types on environment, and the majority bacteria types-the bed at 4.5" can't be as aerobic an environment as it is at .5", with the 'stirring' that results from the typical fauna that live in it
are you saying that a sandbed has an equal amount/proportion of aerobic and anoxic bacteria at .5" as it does at 4.5" ?