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Substrate Depth?

Printed From: Utah Reefs
Category: Specialized Discussion
Forum Name: Equipment
Forum Description: This is the place to ask question about reef equipment.
URL: http://www.utahreefs.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=22044
Printed Date: November 30 2025 at 7:19pm
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Topic: Substrate Depth?
Posted By: richins1
Subject: Substrate Depth?
Date Posted: November 24 2007 at 11:20pm

I am a little bit confused on how much substrate to put into my tank. I have read that you don�t want much more than an inch because of the formation of anaerobic bacteria that in turn put off harmful things in that water. But when I see picture of peoples tanks they have about two or three inches?




Replies:
Posted By: Adam Blundell
Date Posted: November 24 2007 at 11:33pm
I'd go four inches if it were me.
Adam


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Posted By: Mike Savage
Date Posted: November 24 2007 at 11:52pm
3" is minium for me even in my Red Sea Max.
 
Mike


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Posted By: chk4tix
Date Posted: November 25 2007 at 12:25am
I personally have 4, but I guess it's your tank and if you want 1" then go for it

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Original Crappy Reef Club Member #2



Posted By: dkle
Date Posted: November 25 2007 at 1:45am
I don't really know how the numbers came about (never researched it far back enough; although I know I should have, LOL), but I read that a deep sandbed is 6+ inches.  That's when the bottom layer becomes anaerobic.  While it is true that a deep sandbed produces hydrogen sulfide that can wipe out a whole tank when leaked into water, the leakage doesn't occur unless you disturb the sandbed.

The shallow sandbeds that I've seen were usually around 3-4 inches; but there is no rule stated that it has to be 3-4 inches.  A lot of it has to do with personal preferences.


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Posted By: Mike Savage
Date Posted: November 25 2007 at 9:09am
The needed depth for a DSB is dependent on the particle size that makes it up. You can use a shallower bed with substrate that packs tighter.
 
Mike


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Posted By: Shane H
Date Posted: November 25 2007 at 10:00am
I prefer 4-5 inches.
 
I do however think that you will get an anaerobic zone in a 4 inch sandbed. Especially if you isolate it to keep out any animals that may disturb the bottom most layer.


Posted By: cl2ysta1
Date Posted: November 25 2007 at 12:01pm

I only have about .5-1 inch in my main tank. This has been standard practice for us ever since we had a few ppl in our reef club lose whole tanks when stirring up sandbeds that were deep. You CAN do a deep sandbed but i'd suggest it in a refugium where you are not going to stir it up moving rocks and frags around. I would NEVER do a deep sand bed again in a tank after all of the bad luck we have had. but it is standard practice for a lot of reefers. There is quite a bit of information on the internet about this. I only have 1 inch in the display but when my refugium is going i will have a deeper sand bed in that. Many people even do bare bottom tanks. I only have the slight sand i do to give pods a place to grow and a place to shove frags.

 

what it all boils down to is personal preference



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Posted By: Mark Peterson
Date Posted: November 25 2007 at 2:27pm

As I understand it, in the biological nature of our aquariums, as in the wild, there are many processes occuring simultaneously. Everyone has heard of the Nitrogen cycle, but few have heard of the Carbon cycle and even fewer have heard of the Sulfer cycle. These natural processes are what create a fully healthy biological system. The DSB allows these systems to grow to full maturity. But remember, as in nature, storms are a necessity to keeping everything doing well in the long term. See this thread for my comments about avoiding "old tank syndrome" http://www.utahreefs.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=22048 - http://www.utahreefs.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=22048  

Also read this thread for a load of useful information about setting up a good yet inexpensive reef aquarium:
  http://www.utahreefs.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=9244 - http://www.utahreefs.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=9244


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Posted By: Dion Richins
Date Posted: November 25 2007 at 5:17pm
I run 3-5 in the display and sometimes even deeper in the refug. I just completely stirred up my 125 (after removing everything. And then drained the tank completely after getting all of the crap suspended into the water Colum) The tank has been up for 4 years and since I wanted to completely re-aquascape it. I figured it was time for a good cleaning. I did refer to those smarter than me that gave me suggestions that finally led to the final action. The tank has cycled a little (100g new water into a 180g system) but everything looks great.

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Posted By: BobC63
Date Posted: November 26 2007 at 5:52pm
Originally posted by richins1 richins1 wrote:

I am a little bit confused on how much substrate to put into my tank. I have read that you don�t want much more than an inch because of the formation of anaerobic bacteria that in turn put off harmful things in that water. But when I see picture of peoples tanks they have about two or three inches?

 
 
1) Plenum the tank first Clap with eggcrate, pvc tubing, and window screen mesh
 
2) 3" of aragonite on top of that
 
3) a 2nd layer of window screen mesh to divide the 2 sandbed levels
 
4) 3" of finer grained sand to finish
 
5) No 'anaerobic' areas, no SO2 issues...
 
6) Oh - and no nitrates, either Thumbs%20Up
 
 


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- My Current Tank: 65g Starfire (sitting empty for 2+ years) -

* Marine & Reef tanks since 1977 *


Posted By: Mark Peterson
Date Posted: November 26 2007 at 7:24pm
I believe that plenums also develop areas where the sulfer process does it's job. As I said, it's part of the natural process that allows our tanks to better simulate nature.
 
I believe the reason we heard so much about DSBs creating a sulfer zone is because of the sheer depth of those DSB's; 6+ inches. I don't think anyone ever recomended more than 6 inches, it just didn't make sense and it also takes up so much of the bottom of the tank...
 


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Reefkeeping Tips, & quick, easy setup tricks:
www.utahreefs.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=9244
Pay it forward - become a paid WMAS member


Posted By: BobC63
Date Posted: November 26 2007 at 8:10pm
Mark:
 
Agree with the second statement - but disagree with the first.
 
I have never come across a properly plenumed substrate that exhibits signs of SO2..
 
Also, there was an excellent article in the last edition of  Marine & Reefkeeping  (I think that's the mag title) re: plenums, where they examine some very large plenumed and non plenumed, DSB tanks at the Waikiki Aquarium; their research basically echoed my experience -
 
ALL of the non-plenumed displays had evidence of SO2 activity in certain areas of the sandbed;
 
NONE of the plenumed displays showed any SO2 presence at all.
 
Big%20smile
 


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- My Current Tank: 65g Starfire (sitting empty for 2+ years) -

* Marine & Reef tanks since 1977 *


Posted By: LordMaximo
Date Posted: December 02 2007 at 2:04pm
I have been using UG filter beds for years with a reverse flow feed to the UG filter bed. It helps keep any chance of posion gas build ups inthe tank.
I also have used 2 different types of substrate beds too. UG filter with crushed coral ~1" thick, divider as of a fine mash type, then the fine beach sand ~ 2" to 3" deep. The reverse flow does not cause any type of disruption in the fine sand......no build-ups or volcanic type burps in the sand either. I discovered this more then 25 years ago in Florida.
Plus I cleaned my tanks on a regular basis to help keep it looking good. The use of egg crate has gradually become more popular in the past few years as a wieght dispersment, and to keep burrowing critters from up setting rock formations.
 
As far as depths go...in reality, I have come across little valleys with more then 12" of sand and silt on the ocean floors. Corals everywhere and the place just streaming with activity. So in the open oceans and through out the southern islands of Florida, it actually was a great veriable of pools on shelves and in the Bahama's was a whole differnet world.
Deep pools at depths of 80ft with briliance of all sorts of life and fawna onthe assorted shelfs.
 
So, each to their own, it is up to your filtration setups and current flows in your individual tanks. Some fish require deep loose substrate to burrow and evolve as a more balanced living conditions, while others require more rock and vertical caves to be comfortable. Each fish is different with the surroundings they are introduced to in the final homes we choose to give them.
 
Good luck,
 
Maximo
 


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