on another forum i belong to, i posted about how i went bare bottom with the big guys' tank, and mentioned that the amount of ben. bacteria lost when i took out the sand was negligible compared to the amount living in the filter media.
another member mentioned that my ben. bacteria took a big hit by removing the sand. i disagree.
this tank is a 55 gallon, running a rena xp2 and xp4 on it. both filters have the maximum amount of sponge and ceramic biomedia (biomax) that i can fit into each filter without compromising filter flow or performance. they are both topped with polyester batting. sand was not even an inch deep before i removed it from the tank.
i hypothesized that i removed very little of the bacteria with the sand. perhaps 15 to 20% was removed (rough estimate). my ammonia and nitrite tests since the sand removal have all come back a definite zero at all times (testing twice a day just to be sure). i did not do any filter maintenance the day i took the sand out, but did do a very large water change (at least 75%, maybe a bit more), and used Prime at approx double dose plus a titch (holy chloramines here batman!). my testing kit is API (liquid regent kit) and it is not expired.
your thoughts on whether the sand removal caused harm to my bacteria or not?
another member mentioned that my ben. bacteria took a big hit by removing the sand. i disagree.
this tank is a 55 gallon, running a rena xp2 and xp4 on it. both filters have the maximum amount of sponge and ceramic biomedia (biomax) that i can fit into each filter without compromising filter flow or performance. they are both topped with polyester batting. sand was not even an inch deep before i removed it from the tank.
i hypothesized that i removed very little of the bacteria with the sand. perhaps 15 to 20% was removed (rough estimate). my ammonia and nitrite tests since the sand removal have all come back a definite zero at all times (testing twice a day just to be sure). i did not do any filter maintenance the day i took the sand out, but did do a very large water change (at least 75%, maybe a bit more), and used Prime at approx double dose plus a titch (holy chloramines here batman!). my testing kit is API (liquid regent kit) and it is not expired.
your thoughts on whether the sand removal caused harm to my bacteria or not?