Randy Holmes-Farley
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My Tank Thread
You made a NO3:PO4 ratio comparison of the system pre water change but only the water column post water change. Feels like apples and oranges to me, but the trend still holds even if you do it this way. With each iteration you will trend towards climbing PO4.
It all depends on where you start this thought experiment, and what is being compared to what. I don’t think we really disagree on the fundamental process, and I agree that water changes are not as effective at exporting phosphate as one may expect.
You assume there is already phosphate bound and it is going to come off. In that scenario, I certainly agree with you. A water change will not reduce phosphate as much as nitrate due to the desorption replacing some of what was lost.
But if you consider the entire process which must include how that phosphate got onto the rock, then I do not agree. Yes, the water change will still be exporting less than the 100:1 starting point/waste production ratio, but the level in the water remaining will not be higher P than the 100:1 starting point/waste production ratio. Perhaps it is the starting point meaning we disagree on. I’m think the ratio produced in the tank.
. For example, when you put that starting 100 ppm. Nitrate and 1 ppm phosphate water into contact with rock, the phosphate level declines and you no longer have that same starting level. So even though the water cha ge removes less, it’s not enough less to overcome the initial drop.
Let’s try a different approach. You said the phosphate rises with each iteration. Forever? Where would it come from? There is limited phosphate on the rock. You can’t just assume it keeps coming off without accounting for it getting into the rock in the first place.
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