Phil_1983
Member
- Messages
- 87
- Location
- Germany, NRW
JBL or Sera.
JBL-specific.
Thanks, I think my local shop has JBL only. But I will stay away from the App-based one.
JBL or Sera.
JBL-specific.
Perfect. The simple answer is that you can just use their growth, and the <"Duckweed Index">, as your fixed nitrogen test kit.There are actually three different types of floating plants in the tank.
Limnobium laevigatum, because I read your duckweed index.
Phyllutans fluitans.
I also got some Salvinia minima.
Labs. tend to use an ion selective electrode, or ion chromatography‐based nutrient analyses, but nitrite (NO2-) is one of the easier ions to test for with reagents via spectroscopy, because it forms some insoluble coloured compounds.May I ask if there is a way to obtain realistic measurements so that I don't have to guess? I'm pretty sure there are methods used in laboratories, but I'm looking for something that a “normal hobbyist” can use
I wanted to buy some test strips today, as Mac suggested.
The ones I recommended are basically rebranded Merck, available for much less money and in every petstore.you can get test strips from Merck etc,
This is my plan. I am trying to understand the different colorings of the leaves as you descirbed in the index. For now I am still training my eyesHi all,
Perfect. The simple answer is that you can just use their growth, and the <"Duckweed Index">, as your fixed nitrogen test kit.
Labs. tend to use an ion selective electrode, or ion chromatography‐based nutrient analyses, but nitrite (NO2-) is one of the easier ions to test for with reagents via spectroscopy, because it forms some insoluble coloured compounds.
What @MacZ says, you can get test strips from Merck etc, these commonly use the "Griess reaction", where nitrite reacts with an aromatic amine in acidic solution to form a red-violet diazonium salt, which is then measured by colorimetry (or by eye).
I'll be honest I haven't ever felt the need to test the tanks for nitrite (NO2-), even when they were in the lab.
cheers Darrel
Okay, this is really interesting. I am definately have to do more reading about water chemistry. It is such a big field. Thanks for sharing these insights. I am trying to understand what is going on and this is really, really helpful.Labs. tend to use an ion selective electrode, or ion chromatography‐based nutrient analyses, but nitrite (NO2-) is one of the easier ions to test for with reagents via spectroscopy, because it forms some insoluble coloured compounds.
What @MacZ says, you can get test strips from Merck etc, these commonly use the "Griess reaction", where nitrite reacts with an aromatic amine in acidic solution to form a red-violet diazonium salt, which is then measured by colorimetry (or by eye).
I'll be honest I haven't ever felt the need to test the tanks for nitrite (NO2-), even when they were in the lab.
Perfect.The ones I recommended are basically rebranded Merck, available for much less money and in every petstore.
Neufeld lab. thread <"Linked here">Oh, thank you very much, Darrel!
Probably these bits:I'll have a go through the paper when I have time and abstract the "good stuff".
And the Graph..... There was one apparent difference between the aquariums with and without early nitrification, which was the inclusion of live plants in both Aquariums1 and 2, but not in Aquarium 3......We hypothesize that live plants served as a source of microorganisms, introducing nitrifiers that may have decreased the time required to establish an effective nitrifying community. Many rhizosphere and phyllosphere microorganisms would be transferred into the new aquarium upon addition of the plants. In aquaponics systems, nitrifying bacteria are often present in the system and sometimes associated with plant roots, including comammox Nitrospira and AOA [53, 54]. Elevated 16S rRNA gene copies per bead and sponge sample detected in the pre-fish sampling for Aquariums 1 and 2 support the hypothesis that they had a higher initial inoculation of microorganisms prior to the addition of fish, which might have aided in microbial community establishment. In addition to a potential microbial inoculation source, the live plants in Aquariums 1 and 2 provided some nitrate removal from the water via assimilatory processes, possibly explaining lower average nitrate concentrations for Aquarium1 (4.2±0.1mg/LNO3--N) and Aquarium 2 (7.2±1.3 mg/L NO3--N) compared to Aquarium 3 (9.5±1.5 mg/L NO3--N) across weeks 9–12.