hello; This is my understanding as well.all the filtration in the world won't reduce nitrates.
Hello; After some consideration I began to "harvest" plant material from my tanks. Plants help with nitrates by incorporating them into the plants parts such as leaves. I try to remove damaged or dead leaves so they do not decay in the tank and thus release the compounds back into the water.The plants should be helping with the problem
Any chance your dosing ferts? I don't know why I am just thinking about this now.
Could any of that driftwood be rotting?
+1 for fluidized k1 you wont be disapointed.
I think everyone else has already nailed the problem. Good luck i hope this helps!
VRWC while you are upgrading something that relaly helped me was adding some airstones under the submerged media.
My issues were a small rise im Nitrites......it cured my issue right away. I realaize you gave high nitrAtes. I am thinking the extra air may help to more quickly break down any organics that maybe stuck in your media.
I too am making a switch to k1
VRWC are tha matala mats stiff? I am looking for something i could stand up in my sump to allow water to pass through but contain my k1 media. I was thinking about siliconing two pieces of glass and sticking a ridged mat in it and have it stick out the top keeping the media from overflowing into the next chamber.
Nitrate creep is worth reading up on, I will never do less than %75 per week after my research.
Agree that your problems arnt creep related but here's a little math. Showing you should be well within spec if the estimated 1ppm per day is correct.
Fw tanks need 75% pw of preferably fin level if you plan on missing one occasionally.
Would your substrate depth effect nitrates, I'm guessing your not stirring it up due to the plants, could have tonnes of trapped crud in there anerobic.
hello; This is my understanding as well.
Hello; After some consideration I began to "harvest" plant material from my tanks. Plants help with nitrates by incorporating them into the plants parts such as leaves. I try to remove damaged or dead leaves so they do not decay in the tank and thus release the compounds back into the water.
I now also remove a portion of the plants from time to time. A couple of local fish shops have been taking them.
My take is that the benefit of plants for removing nitrates is in constant new growth. To me this also means the physical removal of older growth.