QA

Quick Answer: How Do You Use Bio Balls In A Pond

Place the appropriate number of The Pond Guy® BioBalls™ into a mesh filter media bag and place into an area of your pond in direct contact with flowing water. For best results place The BioBalls™ on top of the filter media pad in your waterfall filter box.

Where do you put bio balls in a pond?

When To Use The Pond Guy BioBalls filter media can be placed in any pond that requires additional filtration. The BioBalls can be placed in skimmer boxes, waterfall filters, or directly in your pond to increase the available surface area for beneficial bacteria.

What do bio balls do in a pond?

Bio balls are used to hold the beneficial bacteria from your tank and not for removing waste products from the system. We recommend that these are used after the water flows through filter foam as the foam will catch and remove any debris from the water meaning these will not get stuck in the groves of the Bio balls.

Should I clean my bio balls?

If you notice a thick green or brown gunk coating your bio balls, then you need to clean them. Cleaning bio balls is best done during a water change. Take some of the water you removed from your tank and swish the bio balls around in it. Don’t scrub or wipe your bio balls as this can remove the bacteria.

Which is better bio balls or ceramic rings?

Bio balls only carry nitrifying bacteria. Ceramic noodles can carry both nitrifying bacteria on the surface and denitrifying bacteria inside. That makes ceramic rings the hands down winner since they can carry both types of bacteria. You see, ceramic rings increase their surface area through tiny little pores.

Are bio balls good or bad?

IMO bio balls are bad. When you have the proper amount of live rock,one and a half to two lbs per gallon,filter floss and bag of carbon that your overflow drains through you will be in good shape. Bio balls are only bad if you do not keep up with the maintenance on them.

Can I use both bio balls and ceramic rings?

Bio balls can only carry nitrifying bacteria but ceramic rings carry both nitrifying and denitrifying bacteria. The pores of ceramic rings offer extra space for bacteria to live. But they can get clogged easily and even permanently blocked.

Can you have too much bio media?

Can you have too much bio media? Yes, especially in a planted tank where the plants are doing a lot of the bio filtration. The excess volume of bio media may take up the space in the filter that could be better used by more mechanical media.

When should I replace ceramic media?

How often change ceramic media? Replacing some of the media every year or so can help to keep the filtration efficiency. Never replace more than 1/3rd of your media at one time and wait at least a month before replacing any more.

How long does it take for bio balls to work?

Two weeks should be enough time for bacteria to grow on them. That’s if the tank is fully established.

How many bio balls are needed per gallon?

How Many Bio Balls To Use Per Gallon? Of course, this depends on your specific tank set up, but a good general rule is to use about 2.2 gallons of bio balls per 100 gallons of water in your tank.

How do I clean my pond bio balls?

If you just want to clean the gunk out of the bio-balls and don’t care about the bacteria that is on them, just put your dirty bio-balls into an old pillow case and run it through your washing machine on the “gentle” cycle with a little laundry detergent for a few minutes.

What is the best bio filter media?

Fluval BioMax Bio Rings Fluval BioMax Bio Rings are the best example on the market. Their internal porous system, like the Seachem Matrix BioMedia (see below), help more bacteria to grow than smooth biofilter media do. The ring shape allows for water to flow through the biofilter media.

Should I use bio balls in a reef tank?

Bio Balls can be used in saltwater aquariums but if left uncleaned they easily trap detritus which can lead to high nitrates & phosphates. They provide a large surface area for nitrifying bacteria to colonize however newer technology is available to work more efficiently & require less maintenance.

Where do bio balls go in a filter?

Place the bio balls in the stream of water running through your fish tank’s filter. Although bio balls will catch some pieces of algae, they are not meant to be used as a physical filter. Installing them downstream of a filter membrane will help keep them from clogging.

Do bio balls float?

Depending on your application floating bioballs may be fine. We have a 700G tank and require sinking bioballs, therefore we use the Laguna ones Which Indeed DO SINK. and DO NOT FLOAT.

What can I use instead of bio balls?

Bioballs are nothing more than surface area for nitrifying bacteria to colonize onto. A better replacement would be a sand bed or porous rock.

Do you need to replace Bio media?

Bio media that is a porous solid (not sponge or plastic) such as clay rings, ceramic balls, lava rock, and sintered glass, does need to be replaced periodically as the micro pores fill and clog. Bleaching can sterilize the crud in the pores but won’t clean them out.

How often should you clean a pond bio filter?

After the first 6 weeks, with the pond water at 65 degrees or warmer, the filter bag should be cleaned once a week, unless there is dirt on the bottom of the pond from plants tipping over, or the fish have kicked out the gravel while trying to spawn.

How often should you change bio balls?

Fluval says – About half of your Fluval Bio-Max media should be replaced approximately every 6 months – it is not recommended that you replace all of the Bio Max filter media at one time because to do so would upset the balance of beneficial bacteria in your aquarium.

Can I reuse old bio balls?

They are very good for a bio filter, but the byproduct is that it produces a lot of nitrates. You can use them, but you’ll have to rinse detritus out of them frequently or they become a nitrate factory.