Vermiculite is a type of clay. If it's clay, then it has a good enough CEC to be useful. Not all CEC is created equally though and I think that may be why Vermiculite is not as popular as it once was. But so what? All that means is that someone was more of a dreamer and then woke up and got real. It depends on the cations that are attracted to the surface. In Vermiculite's case it tends to attract Calcium more so than Potassium as opposed to something like Muscovite, which has a higher selectivity for K+. According to AquaBotanic, Vermiculite is OK at attracting PO4 but not NO3 directly. It can pull NH4 but does not make it easily available to plants, so this then requires bacterial activity to convert the NH4 to NO3. No big deal. You may need to top this with basic gravel as well to keep it from sending particles everywhere, especially if you have digging fish. It does float as well so requires soaking for a week or more.
I thought the Diatomite is that material they use in Diatom filters. It is very fine, almost like talcum powder so that might not be the best. How ironic that this is just the dried silica shells of the very same diatomic algae that everyone moans about...
From what I gather, Kanuma is basically pumice. They just dig it out of the ground in that region of Japan. I'm personally not overly impressed with the CEC of pumice (this is what ADA Powersand is). It might be great for Bonzai but I reckon you can do better. The nutrient retention in pumice has more to do with it's porosity, not much with chemical attraction of nutrient ions although it does have some CEC.
Cheers,
I thought the Diatomite is that material they use in Diatom filters. It is very fine, almost like talcum powder so that might not be the best. How ironic that this is just the dried silica shells of the very same diatomic algae that everyone moans about...
From what I gather, Kanuma is basically pumice. They just dig it out of the ground in that region of Japan. I'm personally not overly impressed with the CEC of pumice (this is what ADA Powersand is). It might be great for Bonzai but I reckon you can do better. The nutrient retention in pumice has more to do with it's porosity, not much with chemical attraction of nutrient ions although it does have some CEC.
Cheers,