Hello all,
I am on a quest to find an effective carbon source for phosphate reduction.
So far the tried and true phosphate reduction methods are:
GFO - highly effective but its basically taking a hammer to the situation and the drawbacks are potentially bottoming out the phosphate and surprisingly what else is pulled from the water column with this method. Oceamo actually ran a test of what else is stripped from the water column and their findings are found here.
This is the method I currently use and what I want to get away from. I am able to manage almost a perfectly steady reading test to test weekly by running my GFO reactor on a timer through my Apex which runs the reactor for 10 minutes on and 5 minutes off throughout the day. The biggest issue for me personally is I run the Captiv8 method (much like moonshiners) and I am basically throwing away money with the GFO stripping away minor and trace elements along with phosphate.
Lanthanum Chloride - Super effective at targeting phosphate but potentially lethal to fish. I have used this method as well with great success. I am super cautious with this though. I drip it into my overflow box very slowly throughout the day into 5 micron socks. I have observed no ill effects with my fish but the horror stories are out there. I also notice increased levels of lanthanum on my ICP tests and the continued use of this method and the resulting buildup on lanthanum are unknown at this point (as far as I can tell with the research I have done).
Macro algae's - refugium, turf scrubbers, etc. I don't have much experience with this to be honest. Are the effects towards phosphate reduction more skewed towards nitrate reduction much like vodka, vinegar?
Vodka/Vinegar - great at reducing nitrate. I do not find it effective at all reducing phosphate
I know some may come in and say, feed less. Not really an option for me as fish health is of the utmost importance for me and I feed multiple times a day, mainly due to over a dozen anthias in my system.
So this leads me to the next phase of my journey and I am looking into an effective carbon source for reduction that does a good job specifically targeting phosphate with minimal impact towards other elements. I do want to make sure I am safe about it though and not introduce a product/chemical/compound/element that can/will cause harm immediately or over time.
What has intrigued me are a couple things - Tropic Marin Elimi-NP and Bacto-Balance. The problem with Bacto-Balance was the fact that I ran it at their max recommended dose and my phosphate still crept up. I can lower it with Elimi-NP but with a 600 gallon tank it will just be more expensive for me then I want to pay to run this product full time. It is however effective in reducing phosphate. So the question is, what in it? They list the ingredient as Polyalcohols. What is that exactly? Well Randy answers the question as basically no idea really. The term is too broad. of course if TM listed the ingredients most reefers are the DIY type and that would cut into their profits so I do understand not listing what it is. That being said, I believe TM has talked about long chain polymers in some threads here on R2R which gives us a little more insight to what we can use for the DIY crowd.
I did find an interesting thread here by @LeadHead83 which didn't seem to pick up much steam. for me personally I am interested in the Propylene Glycol in his recipe. Could this be the main or one of the main ingredients in TM's product? The effectiveness of PG has a phosphate remover is mentioned here.
Another reason that has me leaning in towards PG dosing is my recent use of Prazipro. The main ingredient in Prazipro is dipropylene glycol which is a carbon source. Running this treatment decimated my nutrients which are discussed here with Jay in the fish treatment forum. I don't know the exact difference from dipropylene glycol from Propylene Glycol but they both appear to be carbon sources.
Fact is I can buy a gallon of Propylene Glycol from Amazon for about $30. Elimi-NP is $18 for 250ml. If PG effectively does the same thing, why not explore this option.
If I decide to experiment with PG I will post my findings here.
Your thoughts and experiences appreciated!
Kris
I am on a quest to find an effective carbon source for phosphate reduction.
So far the tried and true phosphate reduction methods are:
GFO - highly effective but its basically taking a hammer to the situation and the drawbacks are potentially bottoming out the phosphate and surprisingly what else is pulled from the water column with this method. Oceamo actually ran a test of what else is stripped from the water column and their findings are found here.
This is the method I currently use and what I want to get away from. I am able to manage almost a perfectly steady reading test to test weekly by running my GFO reactor on a timer through my Apex which runs the reactor for 10 minutes on and 5 minutes off throughout the day. The biggest issue for me personally is I run the Captiv8 method (much like moonshiners) and I am basically throwing away money with the GFO stripping away minor and trace elements along with phosphate.
Lanthanum Chloride - Super effective at targeting phosphate but potentially lethal to fish. I have used this method as well with great success. I am super cautious with this though. I drip it into my overflow box very slowly throughout the day into 5 micron socks. I have observed no ill effects with my fish but the horror stories are out there. I also notice increased levels of lanthanum on my ICP tests and the continued use of this method and the resulting buildup on lanthanum are unknown at this point (as far as I can tell with the research I have done).
Macro algae's - refugium, turf scrubbers, etc. I don't have much experience with this to be honest. Are the effects towards phosphate reduction more skewed towards nitrate reduction much like vodka, vinegar?
Vodka/Vinegar - great at reducing nitrate. I do not find it effective at all reducing phosphate
I know some may come in and say, feed less. Not really an option for me as fish health is of the utmost importance for me and I feed multiple times a day, mainly due to over a dozen anthias in my system.
So this leads me to the next phase of my journey and I am looking into an effective carbon source for reduction that does a good job specifically targeting phosphate with minimal impact towards other elements. I do want to make sure I am safe about it though and not introduce a product/chemical/compound/element that can/will cause harm immediately or over time.
What has intrigued me are a couple things - Tropic Marin Elimi-NP and Bacto-Balance. The problem with Bacto-Balance was the fact that I ran it at their max recommended dose and my phosphate still crept up. I can lower it with Elimi-NP but with a 600 gallon tank it will just be more expensive for me then I want to pay to run this product full time. It is however effective in reducing phosphate. So the question is, what in it? They list the ingredient as Polyalcohols. What is that exactly? Well Randy answers the question as basically no idea really. The term is too broad. of course if TM listed the ingredients most reefers are the DIY type and that would cut into their profits so I do understand not listing what it is. That being said, I believe TM has talked about long chain polymers in some threads here on R2R which gives us a little more insight to what we can use for the DIY crowd.
I did find an interesting thread here by @LeadHead83 which didn't seem to pick up much steam. for me personally I am interested in the Propylene Glycol in his recipe. Could this be the main or one of the main ingredients in TM's product? The effectiveness of PG has a phosphate remover is mentioned here.
Another reason that has me leaning in towards PG dosing is my recent use of Prazipro. The main ingredient in Prazipro is dipropylene glycol which is a carbon source. Running this treatment decimated my nutrients which are discussed here with Jay in the fish treatment forum. I don't know the exact difference from dipropylene glycol from Propylene Glycol but they both appear to be carbon sources.
Fact is I can buy a gallon of Propylene Glycol from Amazon for about $30. Elimi-NP is $18 for 250ml. If PG effectively does the same thing, why not explore this option.
If I decide to experiment with PG I will post my findings here.
Your thoughts and experiences appreciated!
Kris
