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#42
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George wrote:
"Elaine T" wrote in message om... George wrote: "Sean Dinh" wrote in message ... TT and nitrate reduction... http://tinyurl.com/4hlhx 10 ppm is not acceptable in reef aquariums, and I strongly suspect it does little good in large freshwater systems (such as garden ponds) with no/inadequate plants to remove it. Hence, the algae blooms. In a sand bed that uses a Jaubert plenum, a porous plenum is constructed beneath the bed with a void space below the bed that is filled with water, anaerobic bacteria form in the bottom depths of the substrate and in the water below. As anaerobic bacteria cultivate, they remove nitrates. Anaerobic action produces a fair amount of heat. The heat warms the water layer below the gravel. The warmer water flows upwards, displacing cooler water above the gravel. This action moves water through the plenum at very slow rates. The slow movement of water through the gravel helps to prevent dangerous hydrogen-sulfide gases from forming in the plenum. The deep gravel bed also provides a home for burrowing motile invertebrates which feed on solid organic mulm and detritus. The idea here is to move away from systems that required heavy maintenance to prevent nitraqtes from getting too high. Trickle filters work great in removing nitrogen compounds over a limited time period before they must be maintained (i.e., cleaning pre-filters, etc). Sand beds with a Jaubert plenum usually never have to be cleaned because, if it is properly constructed, there is no build up. http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.u...?article_id=21 Jaubert plenums have been tried in large FW planted tanks shortly after they became popular in sal****er. It is much harder to get a population of denitrifying bacteria in FW that does not include sulfur reducing bacteria and generally attempts at denitrification in FW crash and burn. Sulfur reducing bacteria establish in the plenum, poison the water, and fish start showing all sorts of bizarre diseases in what otherwise seems to be a healthy system. -- __ Elaine T __ __' http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ Do you have a link to any papers on this? I found a web site this evening that describes the set up and it seems to suggest that it works very well, at least in freshwater aquariums. It also recommended to use 2-3 mm diameter gravel instead of sand. Since we are talking about a lot more water, I am considering using even larger gravel (probably something slightly smaller than peah gravel). I've also read elsewhere that fears of crashing and burning are unfounded if it is done properly. Of course, like any experiment, I'll have to monitor it. Sulphur-reducing bacteria could become a problem if the substrate becomes completely anoxic. But most sulpur-reducing bacteria are anoxic. The idea of using a live gravel bed in a garden pond must take into considerations all of the needs of the bateria that will live there. De-nitrifying bacteria are anoxic, while ammonia reducing and nitrite-reducing bacteria are aerobic. The idea is to get all three types growing in the same substrate. So can we expect these three bacteria to live viably together? The answer is yes, IF oxygentated water is induced to flow just above the gravel (parallel to it), which will induce flow/exchange within the gravel, but at a low rate. I suspect that my hogs (fish) will also root around in it enough looking for food that it will get enough oxygenation. But I plan to come up with a way to create the current flow a few inches above the gravel. I already have a very thin layer of gravel on the bottom (I had extra gravel when I built my biofilter, and I wanted to add a little color to the bottom of the pond), and they do root around in what I already have there. But I will certainly take your advice at heart before I make any final decisions. Thanks for the advice. Oh, and after reading that article, and your advice, I will probably lose the plenum and just build the substrate right on the bottom. Here is the link to the site I found: http://www.athiel.com/lib/lg-fw.html Here is another one about gravel filtration (as opposed to undergravel filtration): http://www.athiel.com/lib/ugfilterarticle.htm Just read the part about gravel filtration. I can't find the failed Jaubert attempt right off, but here's some on similar denitrification attempts - not formal, and nobody as famous as Thiel. http://www.thekrib.com/Filters/plenum.html has an article on the shortcomings of Jaubert's original idea in FW. http://www.thekrib.com/Chemistry/nitrate.html has my own account of trying to use a commercial denitrator called a Nitrex box. It was a flat, black box with a nutrient mix for denitrifying bacteria that was supposed to prevent the growth of sulfur-reducing bacteria. There were slots for convective circulation and you buried it in the gravel to form something like a plenum. I got nice denitrification for a while and then the typical H2S crash and burn. http://www.thekrib.com/Filters/denitrator.html has George Booth's DIY coil denitrator design. Similar to my experience, after a few months of successful operation, the coil started pumping H2S into the tank and killing fish. George Booth is a gifted plant tank aquarist, and if anyone could have pulled off denitrification it would be him. I was reading rec.aquaria avidly then and nobody managed a successful denitrator design in FW other than bog filters or algae scrubbers. However, Thiel's live gravel article is very interesting. It's actually quite easy to run a planted aquarium with only water movement and minimal filtration - the so-called Dutch Aquarium. The plants and gravel provide plenty of surface area for filtration. Malaysian trumpet snails (alas, tropicals) provide substrate turnover, with a loach keeping the population from getting out of hand, and the plant roots prevent anaerobic zones from developing. Doing this in a pond seems possible if your fish...er hogs stir the gravel and circulation over the gravel bed is good. I wonder if there is a coldwater snail that would burrow in the gravel to help things stay aerobic? I'm sure you'll get plenty of healthy nitrification in the least. I hope it works out with some denitrification as well. -- __ Elaine T __ __' http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ |
#43
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![]() "Elaine T" wrote in message . com... George wrote: "Elaine T" wrote in message om... George wrote: "Sean Dinh" wrote in message ... TT and nitrate reduction... http://tinyurl.com/4hlhx 10 ppm is not acceptable in reef aquariums, and I strongly suspect it does little good in large freshwater systems (such as garden ponds) with no/inadequate plants to remove it. Hence, the algae blooms. In a sand bed that uses a Jaubert plenum, a porous plenum is constructed beneath the bed with a void space below the bed that is filled with water, anaerobic bacteria form in the bottom depths of the substrate and in the water below. As anaerobic bacteria cultivate, they remove nitrates. Anaerobic action produces a fair amount of heat. The heat warms the water layer below the gravel. The warmer water flows upwards, displacing cooler water above the gravel. This action moves water through the plenum at very slow rates. The slow movement of water through the gravel helps to prevent dangerous hydrogen-sulfide gases from forming in the plenum. The deep gravel bed also provides a home for burrowing motile invertebrates which feed on solid organic mulm and detritus. The idea here is to move away from systems that required heavy maintenance to prevent nitraqtes from getting too high. Trickle filters work great in removing nitrogen compounds over a limited time period before they must be maintained (i.e., cleaning pre-filters, etc). Sand beds with a Jaubert plenum usually never have to be cleaned because, if it is properly constructed, there is no build up. http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.u...?article_id=21 Jaubert plenums have been tried in large FW planted tanks shortly after they became popular in sal****er. It is much harder to get a population of denitrifying bacteria in FW that does not include sulfur reducing bacteria and generally attempts at denitrification in FW crash and burn. Sulfur reducing bacteria establish in the plenum, poison the water, and fish start showing all sorts of bizarre diseases in what otherwise seems to be a healthy system. -- __ Elaine T __ __' http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ Do you have a link to any papers on this? I found a web site this evening that describes the set up and it seems to suggest that it works very well, at least in freshwater aquariums. It also recommended to use 2-3 mm diameter gravel instead of sand. Since we are talking about a lot more water, I am considering using even larger gravel (probably something slightly smaller than peah gravel). I've also read elsewhere that fears of crashing and burning are unfounded if it is done properly. Of course, like any experiment, I'll have to monitor it. Sulphur-reducing bacteria could become a problem if the substrate becomes completely anoxic. But most sulpur-reducing bacteria are anoxic. The idea of using a live gravel bed in a garden pond must take into considerations all of the needs of the bateria that will live there. De-nitrifying bacteria are anoxic, while ammonia reducing and nitrite-reducing bacteria are aerobic. The idea is to get all three types growing in the same substrate. So can we expect these three bacteria to live viably together? The answer is yes, IF oxygentated water is induced to flow just above the gravel (parallel to it), which will induce flow/exchange within the gravel, but at a low rate. I suspect that my hogs (fish) will also root around in it enough looking for food that it will get enough oxygenation. But I plan to come up with a way to create the current flow a few inches above the gravel. I already have a very thin layer of gravel on the bottom (I had extra gravel when I built my biofilter, and I wanted to add a little color to the bottom of the pond), and they do root around in what I already have there. But I will certainly take your advice at heart before I make any final decisions. Thanks for the advice. Oh, and after reading that article, and your advice, I will probably lose the plenum and just build the substrate right on the bottom. Here is the link to the site I found: http://www.athiel.com/lib/lg-fw.html Here is another one about gravel filtration (as opposed to undergravel filtration): http://www.athiel.com/lib/ugfilterarticle.htm Just read the part about gravel filtration. I can't find the failed Jaubert attempt right off, but here's some on similar denitrification attempts - not formal, and nobody as famous as Thiel. http://www.thekrib.com/Filters/plenum.html has an article on the shortcomings of Jaubert's original idea in FW. http://www.thekrib.com/Chemistry/nitrate.html has my own account of trying to use a commercial denitrator called a Nitrex box. It was a flat, black box with a nutrient mix for denitrifying bacteria that was supposed to prevent the growth of sulfur-reducing bacteria. There were slots for convective circulation and you buried it in the gravel to form something like a plenum. I got nice denitrification for a while and then the typical H2S crash and burn. http://www.thekrib.com/Filters/denitrator.html has George Booth's DIY coil denitrator design. Similar to my experience, after a few months of successful operation, the coil started pumping H2S into the tank and killing fish. George Booth is a gifted plant tank aquarist, and if anyone could have pulled off denitrification it would be him. I was reading rec.aquaria avidly then and nobody managed a successful denitrator design in FW other than bog filters or algae scrubbers. However, Thiel's live gravel article is very interesting. It's actually quite easy to run a planted aquarium with only water movement and minimal filtration - the so-called Dutch Aquarium. The plants and gravel provide plenty of surface area for filtration. Malaysian trumpet snails (alas, tropicals) provide substrate turnover, with a loach keeping the population from getting out of hand, and the plant roots prevent anaerobic zones from developing. Doing this in a pond seems possible if your fish...er hogs stir the gravel and circulation over the gravel bed is good. I wonder if there is a coldwater snail that would burrow in the gravel to help things stay aerobic? I'm sure you'll get plenty of healthy nitrification in the least. I hope it works out with some denitrification as well. -- __ Elaine T __ __' http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ I am looking into what critters I can expect that might populated it "naturally", and what I can introduce. I don't plan to plant any plants in the substrate (it will be 45" below the water surface, at any rate). |
#44
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![]() "~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message ... On Fri, 18 Mar 2005 17:34:15 GMT, (~Roy~) wrote: Why does your pond spike so high in PH.......... I have cement blocks around the edge, last year was the worst and they were 5 years old by that time, acid washed many times too. Don't know what the deal was. Lots of baking soda and water changes took care of it. ~ jan Cement blocks like pavers or cinder blocks? I would have assumed that anything underwater would have sealed over and anything above would have aged sufficiently. Maybe the acid washing is keeping the blocks porous and the leeching continues. |
#45
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Cement blocks like pavers or cinder blocks?
Definitely not cinder (I don't think).... more like cement block, but they have more holes, decorative? You can see them at my website by clicking on *Lily Pond Photos* I would have assumed that anything underwater would have sealed over and anything above would have aged sufficiently. Maybe the acid washing is keeping the blocks porous and the leeching continues. Could be. I quit putting acid in, added 4 lbs. of baking soda and then did 4-6 water changes of 20-25% over 10 days (this was recommended by the experts on the KHA board) it worked. Plants were happy after that. Frogs never were bothered, amazingly. ~ jan http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#46
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![]() "~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message ... Cement blocks like pavers or cinder blocks? Definitely not cinder (I don't think).... more like cement block, but they have more holes, decorative? You can see them at my website by clicking on *Lily Pond Photos* I've looked at your site before, but had forgotten the Lilly Ponds. Very attractive, but I see how they might continue to leach with all the decorative area. But after 5 years, I would think the concrete would have aged enough. I would have assumed that anything underwater would have sealed over and anything above would have aged sufficiently. Maybe the acid washing is keeping the blocks porous and the leeching continues. Could be. I quit putting acid in, added 4 lbs. of baking soda and then did 4-6 water changes of 20-25% over 10 days (this was recommended by the experts on the KHA board) it worked. Plants were happy after that. Frogs never were bothered, amazingly. ~ jan Oh, the acid went in the water. Still, isn't acid etching what one does to open the pores of concrete for adhesion of various coatings? But, you obviously know what you're doing and how to correct the problem if it continues. http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ |
#47
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Could be. I quit putting acid in, added 4 lbs. of baking soda and then did
4-6 water changes of 20-25% over 10 days (this was recommended by the experts on the KHA board) it worked. Plants were happy after that. Frogs never were bothered, amazingly. ~ jan Oh, the acid went in the water. Still, isn't acid etching what one does to open the pores of concrete for adhesion of various coatings? But, you obviously know what you're doing and how to correct the problem if it continues. I can only hope (I know what I'm doing) some days it's definitely questionable. ;o) ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
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