Hello B,
in your country there is a successful culture of designing and running planted tanks. I am not very familiar with it. Too far away, too little contact.
You have concerns about pollutants in the styrofoam you have available and want to replace it with filter foam.
My concerns would be the mid-term stability of the filter foam and the successive infiltration of fine components.
I would not overestimate the special filter effect of such filter foam. It is not very different from the coarse substrates under the nutrient-rich soil. In general, denitrification requires a low-oxygen environment, which is achieved by microbial decomposition of organic matter. As a further condition for denitrification, the corresponding anaerobic bacteria are needed, which require organic carbon compounds as a basis for life. This is less likely in a planted tank with a low organic load. Nitrate is an unproblematic nutrient and denitrification is downright undesirable if a planted tank is fertilised with nitrogen.
Perhaps there are other ways to replace the styrofoam. I can think of cold packs filled with water (or sand). Appropriately cut tiles ... feel free to find a better solution. ^^
I would therefore not throw your current concept overboard. There are several concepts that work well. If you are interested in my concept with its focus on microbiology and its dependencies, I would not mix it with your current plan.
In general, I prefer the KISS strategy (Keep It Simple Stupid).
The original idea was to provide the aquarist with the means for a stable aquarium and to focus primarily on the design of his planted tank. Unfortunately, the goal of a well-functioning microbiology is not always easy to achieve. I wish you much success.
With kind regards
Nik
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
in your country there is a successful culture of designing and running planted tanks. I am not very familiar with it. Too far away, too little contact.
So, can I summarise by saying you would go with the polystyrene, not foam sheet?
I think that gives the wrong impression. My summary differs a little.I'm summarising them a sponge base would be great for livestock but maybe not so for plants without ongoing ferts etc?
You have concerns about pollutants in the styrofoam you have available and want to replace it with filter foam.
My concerns would be the mid-term stability of the filter foam and the successive infiltration of fine components.
I would not overestimate the special filter effect of such filter foam. It is not very different from the coarse substrates under the nutrient-rich soil. In general, denitrification requires a low-oxygen environment, which is achieved by microbial decomposition of organic matter. As a further condition for denitrification, the corresponding anaerobic bacteria are needed, which require organic carbon compounds as a basis for life. This is less likely in a planted tank with a low organic load. Nitrate is an unproblematic nutrient and denitrification is downright undesirable if a planted tank is fertilised with nitrogen.
Perhaps there are other ways to replace the styrofoam. I can think of cold packs filled with water (or sand). Appropriately cut tiles ... feel free to find a better solution. ^^
The concept described in my signature is already very different from the usual planted tanks with soil and heavy filtration. The focus is on a transparently reacting, low-maintenance, stable, algue-free and long-lasting planted tank. Low filtration is usually associated with this, which is certainly important, but the decisive factor for the successful operation of an aquarium is its microbiology.I certainly am in favour of less stuff to care about~
I guess I am trying to find a balance between animal, plant and aesthetics without "too much stuff to care about."
I would therefore not throw your current concept overboard. There are several concepts that work well. If you are interested in my concept with its focus on microbiology and its dependencies, I would not mix it with your current plan.
In general, I prefer the KISS strategy (Keep It Simple Stupid).
The original idea was to provide the aquarist with the means for a stable aquarium and to focus primarily on the design of his planted tank. Unfortunately, the goal of a well-functioning microbiology is not always easy to achieve. I wish you much success.
With kind regards
Nik
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)