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  1. #11
    Subadult snake
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    Re: Bioactive enclosure

    IME, don't waste all the work on a cracked tank. Even if it doesn't leak, you'll end up kicking yourself as the crack gnaws at your need for perfection.

  2. #12
    "Preparing For Third shed" Rushthezeppelin's Avatar
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    Re: Bioactive enclosure

    Mehh if the crack is on one of the long sides he can always put that in the back and create a foam background or at least throw some coir hanging basket liner on the back. Even on the sides it' don't hurt,especially since garters feel less secure when surrounded completely by glass (IME).

  3. #13
    Subadult snake
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    Jul 2007
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    Re: Bioactive enclosure

    I agree, but the crack would still bug me.

  4. #14
    "Preparing For Third shed" Rushthezeppelin's Avatar
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    Re: Bioactive enclosure

    wouldn't bug me one bit but then I'm all about practicality above all else

  5. #15
    "Preparing For Third shed" Rushthezeppelin's Avatar
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    Re: Bioactive enclosure

    Well after alot of discussion I'm going another step further with this. So my water feature would be pretty clean and all until the garters decide to poop in there. The size of snake poop compared to slow diffusion of ammonia from fish gills means that ammonia would obviously spike up in the enclosure. Will I'm sure it's normal in our enclosures and in the wild for our garters to sometimes sit in or drink some spoiled water I figured why not try and provide some serious filtration so that the ammonia levels are nice and low within ideally a few hours. The idea evolved from the original idea on a facebook group to incorporate an aquaponics system into the water feature. The other option with water features is frequent full water changes which is a pain. While doable on a large scale there seems to be two slight flaws with going the traditional route. First off traditional aquaponics is designed around a constant low level supply of waste from fish to feed the plants. As we know though alot of herps (sans turtles and very aquatic frogs) poop infrequently and vary from herp to herp on how much they poop in their water. Therefore you would have spikes of waste in the system then nothing at all for who knows how long which would not be good for plant growth..

    So this led us down a new path of looking at plants used specifically to clean water. As of right now I'm planning out a system where I will have the water feature drain into a shallow sump below the tank with duckweed. The beauty of duckweed (and other plants like water cress and hyacinth) is they have the ability to soak up lots of waste in a very short period of time and use it over long periods. This is obviously ideal for a semi aquatic herp setup. Also just for good measure I'm also going to tie a system in for guppie breeding. I'm going to have two small tanks and two big tanks. Small tanks will be one for brood stock (probably 3 females and a male) and one for birthing/growing fry out. Other two tanks will be further growout and segregated by sex so as to control breeding. I should produce way more than enough with this so I might have to get a predatory fish setup at some point to take care of my excess lol.

  6. #16
    "PM Boots For Custom Title" Albert Clark's Avatar
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    Re: Bioactive enclosure

    Sounds like one serious bio active enviornment you are building! Congrats on the engineering and much success to you.
    Stay in peace and not pieces.

  7. #17
    Subadult snake
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    Stillwater, Oklahoma
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    Re: Bioactive enclosure

    I agree that plants are a good step in the right direction but you won't have enough for complete balance... your snake will definitely be able to make a gross overload of waste. Think of the food pyramid... which can be matched to the ecosystem pyramid. How much plants do you need to support one snake? It's more like an 1/2 an acre, not a square metre or two. That, and you can't have a closed system... because you are always inputting. You feed your snake and that prey has to go somewhere after the snake is done with it. Plants will grow, but not enough to compensate in a small enclosure.

    You are putting a lot of time and effort into this... I would strongly encourage a flow-through enclosure. Drill a drain into the bottom. Water goes in through the top via misting, water fall, whatever, picks up wastes like ammonia and carries it out the bottom. You have the choice to use fresh water as an input, or filter the waste water and recycle it. Either way, an external filter allows larger filtration and easier cleaning. You still want a bioactive substrate and living plants to cycle the solid wastes that don't get carried out the bottom.

    I hope this helps, or at least gets the wheels turning some more

  8. #18
    "PM Boots For Custom Title" Jeff B's Avatar
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    Iowa
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    Re: Bioactive enclosure

    Do you have a sponge between the lava rock and the soil? Where did you buy that and what does it look like?

  9. #19
    "Preparing For Third shed" Rushthezeppelin's Avatar
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    Re: Bioactive enclosure

    Quote Originally Posted by joeysgreen View Post
    I agree that plants are a good step in the right direction but you won't have enough for complete balance... your snake will definitely be able to make a gross overload of waste. Think of the food pyramid... which can be matched to the ecosystem pyramid. How much plants do you need to support one snake? It's more like an 1/2 an acre, not a square metre or two. That, and you can't have a closed system... because you are always inputting. You feed your snake and that prey has to go somewhere after the snake is done with it. Plants will grow, but not enough to compensate in a small enclosure.

    You are putting a lot of time and effort into this... I would strongly encourage a flow-through enclosure. Drill a drain into the bottom. Water goes in through the top via misting, water fall, whatever, picks up wastes like ammonia and carries it out the bottom. You have the choice to use fresh water as an input, or filter the waste water and recycle it. Either way, an external filter allows larger filtration and easier cleaning. You still want a bioactive substrate and living plants to cycle the solid wastes that don't get carried out the bottom.

    I hope this helps, or at least gets the wheels turning some more
    Actually the specific plants I'm using for this are perfect for the application (I assume you are talking about my water filter system). Floating plants have an amazing ability to soak up LOTS of waste in a matter of hours. Also this is only to buffer the occasional poop in the water (I've only had all 3 of my girls do it twice in 2 months).

    Also I am using a flow through system for this....water will come down waterfall from the filter system into the water feature. Then it will have a surface drain to maintain constant water level that will drain down into the filter system (it's basically best described as a fresh water refugium really).

  10. #20
    "Preparing For Third shed" Rushthezeppelin's Avatar
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    Re: Bioactive enclosure

    And if you are talking about the land section not being in balance you are wrong. Not sure what your intent was but you haven't replied so I will answer for both possible questions. I know the density of a snake in an area might be 1 to 1/2 an acre in some cases but this does not mean you need half an acre of plants to accommodate for waste. For one there are MANY other animals sharing that half acre with them, many that are much larger and higher metabolism and poop more. Two it's not just plants taking care of waste, it is primarily the inverts used in the system that convert the waste into something that isn't harmful to your herps and is beneficial to plants (technically you don't need the plants in this type of system and some people have herps that destroy them anyway). You have springtails to quickly eliminate the bulk of the wastes mass in usually 24 hours or less and spread it then the isopods do the rest of the job of turning it into natural fertilizer (there are also detritivores that can be used in the system too). There are also aerobic microbes in that system as well. It's not an exact replication of their natural ecosystem but it is a minimal input balanced artificial ecosystem if you will. All that needs to be added is food for the herps, water for the plants and herps and the occasional leaf litter to help sustain high populations of the cleanup crews. Hope one of these posts clears things up for you depending on what your intent was.

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