Brodybreaux25
Chameleon Enthusiast
Ran across this earlier, it claims to filter out the bacteria that builds up in other waterfalls. Thoughts?
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Interesting? What happens to parasites that stay outside the filtration?Ran across this earlier, it claims to filter out the bacteria that builds up in other waterfalls. Thoughts?View attachment 214270
I totally get the concept and thought of this myself. I know aquariums very well. After a minute of thinking, i realized it was know good. Its fine for certain critters. For instance, aquatic turtles should have bio and mechanical filtration to avoid a breeding ground for e coli and other nasties.I found it on Facebook, that should tell you all you need to know about it!
Well then I feel bad for the Cham drinking from it in there promo videoBio filtration is what keeps a fish tank going. Problem is it takes about 5 weeks to build up the bacteria and if you clean it out, you will start over. If the power goes out, you start over. Even adding water to a small system could cause an issue.
This works by actually culturing a good bacteria but bacteria will still live in the water. Fish get bacterial infections. People get sick from drinking from streams where this process happens naturally.
This is no good for chameleons. This would be worse than a regular fountain that get dumped and filled every few days. Dont give these scammers money.
Fountains were a main stay for several years and sometimes they live despite the fountain.... Not because of.I
Well then I feel bad for the Cham drinking from it in there promo video
To make it work you would need a UV sterilizer built in and even then, idk how much bacteria would accumulate on the leaves and such. The water coming out of the sterilizer would be clean but as it travels up the tube an runs back down the waterfall, there would have to be bacteria for it to be picked up. Would it be enough bacteria to matter? Idk. We would need a microbiologist to test it. U.V. Sterilizer reduces the bacteria enough that fish dont get nearly as many diseases and algae doesnt grow much, so maybe.The only reason I gave it the time of day is because this is something that has been bothering me for a long time now. We discuss these things at least twice a month here. I know there has to be a way to make this work, the problem is making it work in a way that is feasible to maintain and at reasonable price point. Don’t know why it bugs me, just does....
If I were to happen to know someone at LSU in the biology department would you help me spec out the parts that you think would be needed to make this work? I’ll pay for and build it but admittedly don’t know enough about the water/filtration side of the equation. Do we know if it’s a certain type of bacteria that creates a problem for the chams or is it a range?To make it work you would need a UV sterilizer built in and even then, idk how much bacteria would accumulate on the leaves and such. The water coming out of the sterilizer would be clean but as it travels up the tube an runs back down the waterfall, there would have to be bacteria for it to be picked up. Would it be enough bacteria to matter? Idk. We would need a microbiologist to test it. U.V. Sterilizer reduces the bacteria enough that fish dont get nearly as many diseases and algae doesnt grow much, so maybe.
I can try to find an appropriate UV sterilizer. I mostly know the big ones. I once owned a wholesale business of ornamental fish where many tanks ran on one system and the UV sterilizer was about 4feet tall. Same principal, I just need to find its little brother. you could also plumb several fountains to one UV but again, I don't know how effective it will be.If I were to happen to know someone at LSU in the biology department would you help me spec out the parts that you think would be needed to make this work? I’ll pay for and build it but admittedly don’t know enough about the water/filtration side of the equation. Do we know if it’s a certain type of bacteria that creates a problem for the chams or is it a range?
The only reason I gave it the time of day is because this is something that has been bothering me for a long time now. We discuss these things at least twice a month here. I know there has to be a way to make this work, the problem is making it work in a way that is feasible to maintain and at reasonable price point. Don’t know why it bugs me, just does....
So I’m assuming there is a pump in there somewhere?Nicktide beat me too it.
Personally, I would custom build the water fall into the cage. Have the supply line go out of the cage, into a UV sterilizer, then into a sediment filter to catch the dead stuff. You could screen off the water in the bottom to make sure feeders can't fall in and plug the system up.
Here a decent cost sterilizer, I'm sure this would be enough. https://hydrobuilder.com/hydroponic...dfHqizAGvc44OV9EHTB2kDe2wZrNI-eoaAno3EALw_wcB.
I thought and still am, debtaing using one of these on my water resovoir. To help kill bacteria in my fogger/resovoir.
So I’m assuming there is a pump in there somewhere?
Do we know if it’s a certain type of bacteria that creates a problem for the chams or is it a range?