what's your opinions.. it talks about gravel mainly.. but sand sub-strait (like fluidized sand filters) could be a massive benefit
more surface area
http://www.athiel.com/lib/lg-fw.html
thanks all

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KDodds wrote:BTDT, for many, many years with ARLC. Before graduating to planted tanks, my tanks of choice were all (FW at least), Cichlid tanks, mostly ARLC. All of them have had 3-6" beds of natural gravels/sands for years. Caveat: an unstirred, perfectly still bed (like many people keep their planteds) with little flow over, and no sand stirrers CAN become a problem (just had this discussion on another forum, where I gracefully bowed out due to persistent and willful lack of understanding). Where small grained substrates are used and ALLOWED TO COMPACT (IOW, neglected due to ignorance), you can have H2S buildups that can be harmful. In KNOWLEDGABLY used tanks, this is ridiculously easy to avoid. Still, you probably do NOT want to use potting soil as the base for a planted tank and then cover it to a full depth of 6" with the "cap", and then NOT add "sand" stirrers/sifters and neglect to allow for SOME flow through. IOW, Deep Subtrate systems work in FW and SW and are NOT dangerous PROVIDED you're not doing it completely wrong. Of course, it doesn't help (see willful lack of understanding above) that everyone already "knows" that anaerobic zones are deadly, that H2S will accumulate to lethal levels, etc. Oh, you'll get some blackening where the anoxic biofiltration is occurring. Absolutely. You'll also get slow release of the H2S gas in bubbles from the bed, periodically. If you DON'T get those bubbles, something's wrong, something's compacted/impacted and preventing natural gas exchange through the layers. Potting soil will EASILY do this. Larger grained gravels, not really.
In a planted tank, though, we're you're trying NOT to disturb root systems, things can get a little tricky. Biofilms can cement grains together, so if there's no movement of the substrate at all, no flow through at all, yeah, bad scenario to think about DSBing. Otherwise, it works very well. It's too bad there's such a paucity of infaunal organisms for the FW "DSB". Hence, I relied on fish.
















from what i have read it doesn't matter how deep the substrate is. it will harbour beneficial bacteria.


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