Alright, good. And thanks for the info about the air stone! So what does actually oxygenate water? And the water is only a few inches high, no worries. And plenty of rocks and a gentle gravel slope.Thanks for the reply!
Alright, good. And thanks for the info about the air stone! So what does actually oxygenate water? And the water is only a few inches high, no worries. And plenty of rocks and a gentle gravel slope.Thanks for the reply!
Water naturally exchanges gasses at the surface, so the short answer is that water oxygenates itself. Oxygen bubbles do not contribute other than they create more surface area for this exchange. What actually happens is it lets the water get rid of more carbon dioxide which in turn leaves more room for oxygen to be absorbed. The oxygen rich water at the surface sinks deeper in the aquarium and the carbon dioxide rich water moves to the surface. The point is...a filter that disrupts the water surface does the same thing, so does a waterfall. An airstone is not necessary.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)