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Thanks, I realize this is topic has been talked to death; I just hadn't see any chemistry regarding organic matter decomposition. I'm trying to think through the process of this rock coming to us and how the phosphates get out. I just hear a lot of "do this, it works" without a how or why...
Here's what I imagine happens, Locals mine random reefs, pulling up the rock and drying it on shore (plenty of starfish/eels etc... to prove this out). At that time there's no appreciable phosphates bound up in the rock (or minimal that I can imagine). We ship it to our houses and organic decomposition starts.
If that is true, then it seems to me that leaving the rock to stew in extremely high nutrient levels may bind to the rock and continue to leach for an unspecified amount of time in the future. I believe most people never change their water in the rock while it cures, thinking that will delay the nitrosomonas bloom etc... But I don't think you need that much nutrients to get the rock cycled, so I changed the water every few days (because it was making the entire house smell!) My thought process was organic nutrients are going into solution, and need to be exported some how; if I remove the water at it's worse, I'll be pulling the bulk of the nutrients out.
What I don't understand is the effect on an acid bath or bleach on organic molecules ahead of any actual cycling; i.e. does the bleach oxidize and come into solution easier which then can be removed? My gut feeling is you should be changing water frequently through the cycling of the rock to make sure it doesn't bind to the rock. Because my assumption is that the organic decaying material is responsible for the nutrients, not the actual mineral composition of the rock.
Here's what I imagine happens, Locals mine random reefs, pulling up the rock and drying it on shore (plenty of starfish/eels etc... to prove this out). At that time there's no appreciable phosphates bound up in the rock (or minimal that I can imagine). We ship it to our houses and organic decomposition starts.
If that is true, then it seems to me that leaving the rock to stew in extremely high nutrient levels may bind to the rock and continue to leach for an unspecified amount of time in the future. I believe most people never change their water in the rock while it cures, thinking that will delay the nitrosomonas bloom etc... But I don't think you need that much nutrients to get the rock cycled, so I changed the water every few days (because it was making the entire house smell!) My thought process was organic nutrients are going into solution, and need to be exported some how; if I remove the water at it's worse, I'll be pulling the bulk of the nutrients out.
What I don't understand is the effect on an acid bath or bleach on organic molecules ahead of any actual cycling; i.e. does the bleach oxidize and come into solution easier which then can be removed? My gut feeling is you should be changing water frequently through the cycling of the rock to make sure it doesn't bind to the rock. Because my assumption is that the organic decaying material is responsible for the nutrients, not the actual mineral composition of the rock.
