JamesC
Member
Decided to open a new thread on this very interesting subject rather than carry it on in the Good Algae Article thread - http://ukaps.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=905
Here's what been said so far:
I'm going to look into this a bit more and I might even test with dosing some urea to see how it goes. To what I can gather it works best in a fully planted tank with CO2 and plenty of all the other nutrients.
Urea needs an enzyme called Urease to be broken down.
Dosing is still fairly critical because urease is naturally occuring so the Urea will be broken down in the tank creating ammonia.
To what I can gather dosing Urea may benefit soft water tanks more than hard water tanks. In the link I posted above there is talk to why this may be so.
James
Here's what been said so far:
George Farmer said:ceg4048 said:As George alluded to, some vendors use ammonia salts as their source of N, which I find completely astonishing. Probably the levels are low enough if dosed properly, but I don't see the point. I might be missing something so I want to study this some more.
Let us know how you get on mate. I read somewhere that plants have an 'easier' time using it for their N source than KNO3. I'm no biochemistbotanist though...
But I know I don't get algae. 😉
JamesC said:I looked at ammonia additions to tanks a while ago. A few notes for you.
Seachem Nitrogen uses guanidine and potassium nitrate as their source for N. Guanidine is similar to urea. I think I'm correct in believing that plants can utilise the Urea but algae can't - may need to check on this.
Tropica use ammonium nitrate but I think it is bound up somehow so it's not like adding ammonium salt - need to confirm this.
Some people have been exprerimenting using urea with good results, but others haven't.
A thread just started on APC might be of interest - http://www.aquaticplantcentral.com/...aquarium-plants-preference-ammonium-over.html. Follow Freemann's link to the Barr Report as well.
ceg4048 said:Hey James, thanks for that bit of clarification. I remember trying Scott's terrestrial fertilizer which contained urea and ammonium nitrate. It worked well as long as I had a huge biomass, dosed small amounts and kept up the water changes, but it was living on the razors edge and any other mistakes I made seemed to be exacerbated by using the product. I was under the impression that urea broke down into other components including ammonia, but if urea is not available to algae then that might explain things. I'm very interested in understanding the mechanism of how TPN+ binds the ammonium nitrate. Can't argue with Georges success using it. 8)
Cheers,
I'm going to look into this a bit more and I might even test with dosing some urea to see how it goes. To what I can gather it works best in a fully planted tank with CO2 and plenty of all the other nutrients.
Urea needs an enzyme called Urease to be broken down.
Dosing is still fairly critical because urease is naturally occuring so the Urea will be broken down in the tank creating ammonia.
To what I can gather dosing Urea may benefit soft water tanks more than hard water tanks. In the link I posted above there is talk to why this may be so.
James