Sparkchaser wrote:
I know the real solution is to add more growbeds and have the plants remove all available nitrates, But what do you do in a smaller saltwater system growing sea bass or cod?
You either grow ulva or other seaweeds/kelps.... or you use a pure RAS based system of bio-filtration....
Quote:
Denitrification generally proceeds through some combination of the following intermediate forms:
NO3− → NO2− → NO + N2O → N2 (g)
The complete denitrification process can be expressed as a redox reaction:
2 NO3− + 10 e− + 12 H+ → N2 + 6 H2O
Absolutely correct..... and you'll note that the process... "de-nitrification".... is the reduction of
nitrates - NO3.... not "nitrites - N02"....
A process that requires oxygen... resulting in oxygen depletion... an anerobic process....
Nitrates are not toxic... unless in huge concentrations.... or unless you leave them, in which case the whole tank turns into a "soupy" anaerobic mess through the oxygen depletion, the anaerobic de-nitrification process...
By which time your fish would be well and truely long dead due to lack of oxygen... and continued ammonia load up to that point...
The same would occur even in freshwater systems.... if you don't oxygenate and bio-filtrate...
You end up with dead fish... and a rotten aquarium.... either way...
And nature kicks in the de-ntrification process to de-toxify" clean up the mess... and restore a "balance"....
