QA

How Does Bio Media Work

Biological media houses bacteria involved in the nitrogen cycle. It provides a larger surface area for beneficial nitrifying bacteria to colonize, where water can pass through the colonies, bringing nutrients and oxygen required for the nitrogen cycle. They can accommodate a lot of bacteria in a small space.

How long does bio media last?

Bio-media does clog over time, and it is recommended to provide clean filter media for effective colonization by bacteria. This family of nitrifying bacteria will benefit from partial media changes every 3-6 months to ensure clean porous surfaces are available.

Do you rinse Bio media?

Just like with an undergravel filter, it is the “lack of proper maintenance” that turns them into a nitrate factory. If you periodically rinse them off and keep them clean, nitrate and bio-balls woes should decrease, as long as this is the sole source of the nitrate problem in the aquarium.

What can I use for bio media?

Types of bio Media These include things like ceramics, sintered glass, pumice stone, and plastic. While all different materials, the aim of each is to provide as much surface area as possible for bacteria.

Which is better bio balls or ceramic rings?

Bio balls should only be used for biological filtration only. They simply exist to trap and remove waste. Ceramic rings will ultimately trap more bad stuff, but your bio balls will ultimately do a better job of denitrifying bacteria.

How often should I change bio balls?

Bio balls don’t really need replaced. They simply provide a foundation for the helpful bacteria to cling to. In fact replacing them would remove a huge amount of good bacteria that you need.

Should I rinse filter media?

Biological Filtration Biological media should be handled carefully, and only changed or rinsed when absolutely necessary, to preserve the bacterial population. If your media becomes clogged with excess debris over time, rinse it in a bowl of aquarium water and check that you have proper mechanical filtration in place.

Should I wash filter media?

Filters are hubs for the beneficial bacteria that keep your aquarium healthy, so cleaning them the wrong way can remove this bacteria and do more harm than good. The beneficial bacteria inside your filter media has taken a long time to establish. Washing all of that away can completely collapse the entire ecosystem.

Should you rinse new filter media?

The first and most important thing to do is to only ever clean filter media in old tank water. Chlorine is added to tap water by water authorities to kill bacteria, so that’s why media should never be cleaned under the tap, and tap water should always be treated before adding it to the aquarium.

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.

Is lava rock a good bio media?

Lava rock – the igneous rock that forms as an erupting volcano’s molten lava cools and hardens – is very porous. When chunks of it live in your filtration system, you provide a lot of surface area for beneficial bacteria to colonize and grow. That’s what makes it such a great filter media.

How do bio balls work?

Bio balls are spheres consisting of tiny tubes that provide a large surface area on which water-filtering microbes can grow. Bio balls work best as wet-dry filters, with moving water passing over them. This allows more oxygen into the tubing, feeding the growth of the beneficial bacteria inside the balls.

How often should I change filter media?

Summary. Some filter media, like bio-media, does not need to be changed. Other media like sponges can be cleaned and re-used multiple times before needing to be changed, usually in about 3-6 months. Chemical filtration definitely should be changed every 1-2 months of continuous use.

What is bio media for fish tank?

Biological media is anything inert that provides housing for nitrifying bacteria that break down nitrogenous pollutants to a less toxic form. This is a media that should not be replaced unless it has become too clogged to function.

How do you organize filter media?

Media Order The water should go through the filter media in the following order: coarse mechanical, fine mechanical, basic chemical (carbon), specific chemical, biological. In filters that use both coarse mechanical and fine mechanical medias the coarse should always be first.

Are bio balls worth it?

Bio balls provide a place for all the good nitrifying bacteria you need in your tank to live. The surface of each bio ball is designed to have as much surface area as possible so the bacteria have as much as possible to cling to.

How long do Bio balls last?

How long do Bio-Balls last? Bio-Balls are made to have a large SA to encourage the growth of marine nitrifying bacteria. Once they have a stable poulation, changing them would leave you without all of the bacteria that had grown there. They should last forever.

How often should I clean my bio filter?

The general rule of thumb is to clean your aquarium filter, regardless of type, once every month (four weeks). Though, you want to wait at least a week from your last cleaning, of the tank or filter, before your next session to help your fish adjust to the new conditions in the tank.

Do you have to clean 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.

Do I need to replace ceramic filter media?

Even the manufacturers don’t agree! Fluval, for example, recommends that ceramic rings be swapped out every 6 months. Marineland, another ceramic filter manufacturer, states that the rings should never be replaced.

How long do filter media last?

Filter media has a typical life expectancy of 10 to 15 years. The life span of your media may vary based on your raw water quality and filter maintenance, as consistent maintenance can prolong the life of your media. Signs that you may need to replace your media are often indicated in your system performance.