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-   -   charcoal to use or not (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/freshwater-aquaria-plants/45354-charcoal-use-not.html)

Dick 13-10-2003 01:12 PM

charcoal to use or not
 
I remember comments made that suggest charcoal is not always good to
use in a filter.

I wonder what the pros and cons are?

I have fresh water tanks. All tropical, wide varieties of fish
species.

Dave Millman 13-10-2003 09:43 PM

charcoal to use or not
 
Dick wrote:

I remember comments made that suggest charcoal is not always good to
use in a filter.

I wonder what the pros and cons are?

I have fresh water tanks. All tropical, wide varieties of fish
species.


Current thinking among a lot of experienced folks is that we can't think
any reason to use activated carbon in a healthy tank except:

* To remove yellowing due to fresh driftwood (the
color causes no harm. Some people don't like it)

* To remove medication added to the tank
(water changes are quite effective here!)

* To help remove toxins in an emergency (I once
lost some fish due to fertilizer or pesticide on
some zuchinni skin. I used carbon and big
water changes once I figured out the cause)

A healthy tank has a mature biofilter culture going in the filter, the
gravel, the plants or some combination of the three. Since we all do
lots of water changes and use water conditioner, we can't think of other
uses for carbon.


Steven Schultz 13-10-2003 10:12 PM

charcoal to use or not
 
I recently found another use, but I've no experience with it as of yet.

Diana Walstad in "Ecology of the Planted Aquarium" suggests that Iron is the
limiting nutrient for algae growth. Since algae depends upon nutrients in
the column, and unchelated Fe precipitates out, then it must be chelated for
algae to get the iron.

I don't what the other effects of DOC (dissolved organic compounds) are, but
they do chelate iron. Activated carbon should pull the DOCs out, keeping
iron from being loose in the column. This is assuming that one does iron
fertilization *in the substrate*.

Again, I've no experience to relate to the idea, but it seems to me that it
may be a good idea to pull out DOCs out on other grounds as well.

Comments?


Current thinking among a lot of experienced folks is that we can't think
any reason to use activated carbon in a healthy tank except:

* To remove yellowing due to fresh driftwood (the
color causes no harm. Some people don't like it)

* To remove medication added to the tank
(water changes are quite effective here!)

* To help remove toxins in an emergency (I once
lost some fish due to fertilizer or pesticide on
some zuchinni skin. I used carbon and big
water changes once I figured out the cause)

A healthy tank has a mature biofilter culture going in the filter, the
gravel, the plants or some combination of the three. Since we all do
lots of water changes and use water conditioner, we can't think of other
uses for carbon.





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