Hi everyone. I have not posted to this forum before. I usually post in the newbee forum however I think this question more belongs here. This is my first aquarium. (Although I have since started working on a 10 gallon.)
I have a planted 29 gallon aquarium that shows lots of growth daily. I am using 55 watts of light with a very good reflector. I have no signs of algae so far. The aquarium was set up at the beginning of December. It is heavily stocked with animals and plants. I am using DIY CO2. My reactor is simply an inverted container that catches CO2. I have no filter just a power head that does not disturb the surface of the water. The water is crystal clear.
I am using pea gravel with laterite as a substrate and I have 20 watts of substrate heating.
I had been doing twice a week 33% water changes. About 3 weeks ago I decided to stop water changes for a while and see what the paramaters were. They have been constant, day or night, for 3 weeks:
0 Ammonia
0 Nitrite
0 Nitrite
pH 7.4
gH 7
kH 5
I have not been measuring phosphates till tonight:
.5 PO4
So, here are my conclusions that I want to run up the flag pole here. I am running very low CO2. The tank seems to be both nitrogen and carbon limited. Since, I do not add any ferts the only source of PO4 and N is from fish food. I choose my feeding based on what the plants want and not what the animals eat. The tank is densily planted enough that many of the fish don't notice I am feeding.
In the long run will having an excess of PO4 create algae problems?
My tap water is very high in Mg. It is about 43ppm this time of year. The PO4 will attach to the Ca and the Mg and try to precipitate. The PO4 lost to Ca as calcium phosphate is lost to the system. The phosphate tied up in Magnisium Phosphate is about half soluable. So the phosphate in the water column represents a fraction of the PO4 in the system.
Whew... So that leads to my question: Why am I changing water? If I am looking to lower the PO4 then I really only need to be doing a gravel vac to remove the precipitated PO4. Is there another reason to change water?
I have a planted 29 gallon aquarium that shows lots of growth daily. I am using 55 watts of light with a very good reflector. I have no signs of algae so far. The aquarium was set up at the beginning of December. It is heavily stocked with animals and plants. I am using DIY CO2. My reactor is simply an inverted container that catches CO2. I have no filter just a power head that does not disturb the surface of the water. The water is crystal clear.
I am using pea gravel with laterite as a substrate and I have 20 watts of substrate heating.
I had been doing twice a week 33% water changes. About 3 weeks ago I decided to stop water changes for a while and see what the paramaters were. They have been constant, day or night, for 3 weeks:
0 Ammonia
0 Nitrite
0 Nitrite
pH 7.4
gH 7
kH 5
I have not been measuring phosphates till tonight:
.5 PO4
So, here are my conclusions that I want to run up the flag pole here. I am running very low CO2. The tank seems to be both nitrogen and carbon limited. Since, I do not add any ferts the only source of PO4 and N is from fish food. I choose my feeding based on what the plants want and not what the animals eat. The tank is densily planted enough that many of the fish don't notice I am feeding.
In the long run will having an excess of PO4 create algae problems?
My tap water is very high in Mg. It is about 43ppm this time of year. The PO4 will attach to the Ca and the Mg and try to precipitate. The PO4 lost to Ca as calcium phosphate is lost to the system. The phosphate tied up in Magnisium Phosphate is about half soluable. So the phosphate in the water column represents a fraction of the PO4 in the system.
Whew... So that leads to my question: Why am I changing water? If I am looking to lower the PO4 then I really only need to be doing a gravel vac to remove the precipitated PO4. Is there another reason to change water?