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#51
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I will write this again for the umpteen time. This process is called
DENITRIFICATION. It is an enzymatic process that converts NO3- into H2O and N2 (O2 is NOT produced). And, once more, H2O is NOT produced. It is merely a carrier. If water is not produced than water is a carrier for what? |
#52
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What do you think happens to the oxygen that is "removed" by the
bacteria? That's its food. This is a good one. You think oxygen is food for the ANAEROBIC bacteria. Hmmm... George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#53
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Very good! When did I write water molecules were broken up?
You stated that hydrogen combines with oxygen from the NO3 to produce H2O. When asked where the hydrogen comes from, you stated that the "enzymes" produce it from water. No, what I wrote was that the H+ come from general acids located within the enzymes active site. Do you know what a general acid is in this context? If not I will explain it to you. The only way they could do that is to strip oxygten atoms off the water molecules. Wrong. The H+ source comes from protonated amino acid residues (general acids) located in the enzymes active site. This might help: H+ doesn't really exist in an aqueous environment, it exists as H3O+. This is the protonated form of water. There are other things (molecules) in nature that can be protonated, not just water. For example some amino acids have basic amine side chains that will be protonated at any given time. They can and do serve as the source of H+ in the active site of an enzyme. I don't expect everyone to understand this stuff, but ... Still wrong. Water is produced here. Not possible. Uggg. George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#54
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If Patterson believes that oxygen is removed by the enzyme and only N2 is
produced. What happens to the oxygen? Where do you/he think it goes? Do you think it stays in the enzyme? Not enzyme. Bacteria. Yes, that's exactly what happens. The oxygen is consumed by the bacteria. This might help your confusion: When you state that oxygen is consumed by the bacteria in the denitrification process where does it end up? where does it go? what form does it take? If your answer is not H2O you need to do more reading. |
#55
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And I guess you would laugh if we told you that fish drink
water. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Stoutman wrote on 9/16/2006 8:24 PM: What do you think happens to the oxygen that is "removed" by the bacteria? That's its food. This is a good one. You think oxygen is food for the ANAEROBIC bacteria. Hmmm... George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#57
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Though I would not call it food, any more than I would
call oxygen food for us, but the oxygen has to be taken in since it's not after the nitrogen except for growth. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Wayne Sallee wrote on 9/16/2006 11:38 PM: And I guess you would laugh if we told you that fish drink water. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Stoutman wrote on 9/16/2006 8:24 PM: What do you think happens to the oxygen that is "removed" by the bacteria? That's its food. This is a good one. You think oxygen is food for the ANAEROBIC bacteria. Hmmm... George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#58
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![]() Though I would not call it food, any more than I would call oxygen food for us, but the oxygen has to be taken in since it's not after the nitrogen except for growth. What do you mean by "taken in"? What happens to the oxygen? What part of : 2NO3 +12H+ ---enzymatic---- N2 + 6H2O do you not understand? I gave provided two web site literature sources for you to read that support MY claims. Do you need more? I see 6 oxygens on the left and 6 oxygens expelled on the right. How are they "taken in"? I can't wait for your answer to this. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Wayne Sallee wrote on 9/16/2006 11:38 PM: And I guess you would laugh if we told you that fish drink water. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Stoutman wrote on 9/16/2006 8:24 PM: What do you think happens to the oxygen that is "removed" by the bacteria? That's its food. This is a good one. You think oxygen is food for the ANAEROBIC bacteria. Hmmm... George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#59
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Though I would not call it food, any more than I would call oxygen food
for us, but the oxygen has to be taken in since it's not after the nitrogen except for growth. One more thing since you bring up human cellular respiration. We breath in oxygen, do we "take it in"? Or do we use it for cellular repiration and expell the oxygen in the form of CO2? us (aerobic respiration) C6H12O6 + 6O2 ---- 6CO2 + 6H2O (+ ENERGY (ATP)) -----NO OXYGEN "taken in" anaerobic denitrifying bacteria: 2NO3- + 12H+ ------- N2 + 6H2O + (ENERGY) -------NO OXYGEN "taken in" Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Wayne Sallee wrote on 9/16/2006 11:38 PM: And I guess you would laugh if we told you that fish drink water. Wayne Sallee Wayne's Pets Stoutman wrote on 9/16/2006 8:24 PM: What do you think happens to the oxygen that is "removed" by the bacteria? That's its food. This is a good one. You think oxygen is food for the ANAEROBIC bacteria. Hmmm... George Patterson Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to your slightly older self. |
#60
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"Stoutman" [email protected] wrote in message m...
You were questioning the reason to change water based on nitrates... I am not questioning anything, I am answering Adam's (the OP) question. See above in the thread. You clearly point to relation between high nitrates and need for water change: "Contrary to popular marine aquarium lore, you DO NOT NEED to do partial water changes. My nitrites and nitrates are UNDETECTABLE using store bought LFS test kits." and he "If something causes your nitrites and nitrates to be very low than why would you NEED to do a water change? Just for fun?" Nitrates is not the reason for a water change. You know, there are much more different ions there beside NO3-... Yes, I am aware. Then you are probably aware also, that 80% of their levels you cannot measure at home acuratelly. 80% of what levels? Can you be more specific? Doesn't how accurate you need to be depend on the ion you are referring to? Out of the all ionic compounds in the sea waters only small parts can be measured with aquarium test kits. You can test carbonate hardness/alkalinity, calcium, magnesium, nitrates, phosphates, couple of others with questionable reliablity and that is it. The rest of ions are just one big question mark. You do not know how much are taken out and built into corals and other invertebrate bodies, you do not know how much is left there available in the water. With partial water change you replenish ions used up by growing animals/plants in your tank. I add trace elements (Kent Marine Essential Elements) on a monthly basis. Each element is used up in a different speed, but you dump all of them on a monthly basis regardless if you need it or not. How do you replenish your trace elements? Partial water change? When you do your partial water change you are removing some percentage of water (15-20%?) and adding artificial sea salt (usually contains trace elements). How do you know your tank needs it (trace elements)? When I am replacing partial water in my tank I am removing some water with bad ionic proportion and replace is with known to be good ionic composition water. Overall effect is that the resulting mixture has ionic combination more similar to natural sea water than an old tank water had... That will lead over time to chemical imbalance and your tank water will be far, far away from the content of natural sea water compared to the water mixed from the fresh salt mix. You are FAR MORE likely to cause a chemical imbalance by replacing a percentage (15-20%?) of your aquarium water with home made sea water than you are by doing no water change. Can you present some reasoning behind this odd statement ? You also remove organic byproducts your skimmer left behind. Such as? All these which make your water smell and look yellow. Corals, other invertebrates, fish and plants constantly release many substances to the water which accumulate in the closed system like an aquarium. My skimmer runs 24hrs a day. The organic compounds it doesn't remove on the first pass will more than likely be removed on the second, third, fourth or fifth, etc. pass. How about these which do not stick to the foam at all ? No matter how many times water will pass through the skimmer... You are not able to measure them or detect them in home situation... Agreed. Therefore, I have NO reason to question my skimmers effectiveness. I can only go by the health/appearance of my tank mates. They are doing fine. All is well. My water is not yellow and it does not smell. I would like to know more about your tank. Its volume, quantinty and size of fish, other living critters and plants/algae, amount of live rock, lights etc. Would you be so nice and tell us more about your tank ? And how can you tell your water is not yellow? Have you poured it to a white plastic bucket and compared its color to R/O water in a similar bucket? I do not know a skimmer which removes all organics in 100%. Changing water refreshes the water and brings it back to its original ionic combination... The only way YOU would "bring it back to its original" condition is if you changed 100% of your water. Is this what you are doing? If this is what you are doing you are doing more harm than good. No, I am not replacing 100% of water in my reef tank, I do it in my grow up tanks for my baby maroon clowns. And of course it is true - it would be 100% in original condition only if replaced in 100%, but if you replace only 20-30% than the water is more similar to the original ionic composition than the old water before the change. Do you agree ? Would you be fine if your house was perfectly sealed from the outside air and you just reduce amount of CO2 and add oxygen on regular basis but would not exchange air for years? Another straw man. How do you think your house would smell ? :-)) I do not have microorganisms that eat and decompose my excrements, my aquarium inhabitants do. I would like to duplicate this perfect bilogical balance you have in your tank. It sounds almost magical... Can't wait to learn more about your tank and see how you managed to get is so perfectly ballanced it does not require water change. In my opinion it would require very high biodiversity with right amount of fish, invertebrates, plants/algae working in perfect balance without algae taking over the tank or fish pooping too much plants can process... Such a balanced micro-ecosystem would be a dream of all aquarists. So please do not delay and tell us about your amazing tank. |
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