| Home • Address Editor • Mailing List • Check Your Account Settings |
| Logon • Logoff • Sale Items • Custom Catalog • Your Projects • Wish List • Shopping Cart • Checkout |
|
| |||||||||||||
|
Future Pets' Pond Manual
|
| More Pond-Related Articles |
Pond filters protect the pump from clogging from debris in the pond. More importantly, they purify the water and the enviorment using 2 simple processes:
Mechanical filtration acts as a physical barrier, trapping suspended dirt in a foam block so that it can be easily removed.
courtesy Hagen Pets
Biological filtration is performed by beneficial bacteria which grow naturally in the filter media. These microscopic organisms convert the harmful toxins (ammonia and nitrite) which are manufactured by fish and decay processes into much safer nitrates, which are an excellent plant food.
In the process the water is made clean. The balance of bacteria against waste is the most important part of keeping a pond in healthy condition for fish and plants. Too little bacteria or too much waste will turn everything to muck.
Each time you add fish (or as your fish get larger) you will need more bateria to "digest" the waste produced. Waste is also produced if you let debris lie on the bottm of the pool where it decays. Bacteria grows and multiplies naturally ass it is fed (up to the limit that the filter media is capable of supporting). If your need for waste digestion outstrips the media capacity, you must either add another chamber for media or add another filter.
There are three types of useful pond filters.
Many of the filters today also contain internal UV sterilizers to help control algae. See our article about UV sterilization.
For more information and to see our complete product catalogue, see http://www.futurepets.com
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
If you like what you see, please feel free to copy and paste the link below into your blog or personal home page.