In your new system use a reverse flow undergravel filter. Nitrification bacteria will self regulate to nutrients.This actually leads me to another question, and something immediately relevant to me...
I am in the process of breaking down a 65gal total system, moving it to a temporary 40gal breeder tank, then eventually moving it to a new 150gal total system... I wonder if keeping the brick in the breeder for 6ish weeks would allow it to build up enough nitrifying bacteria to help "skip" the cycle of the new tank, similar to putting established dry rock into a new system. With the intention of removing it after say another 6-8 weeks from the sump of the new tank. Theoretically with the amount of real estate they claim on these bricks, it would be an effective kickstart?
In a mature tank, there are many more types of bacteria than Nitrification & denitrification. When you compare ceramic plates to live rock and only use nitrogen processing bacteria as the comparison, you neglect the most important part of diver collected live rock: micro fauna & fana that provide multiple nutrient pathways that feed corals & filter feeders.
There are many more nutrient pathways than bacteria.
