sushant wrote:the population of beneficial bacteria in tank water is very low and they are generally found attached, as such the chances of them getting destroyed by UV and disturbing the equilibrium of tank is negligible.Romi wrote:A UV filter will kill everything that passes thru it, including the bacteria that balance the aquarium, cycle the filter and are in the water. In a small tank, this can lead to ammonia spikes just like in new tanks. When the tank is huge , like a Koi tank or pond, it can work but not here.sushant wrote:Nice explanation. This will be good reference for future.
One of the method to counter these type of disease is by using a good UV filter.
As I said before, I am talking about a tank with little space since it is not as big as it needs to be considering the fish load. And in such a tank, even the proportion of good bacteria wherever it might be that is knocked out by the UV could be critical in tipping the scales, even if it is 10%. Even antibiotics used are said to be affected by UV filters in small tanks. The UV filter needs the bulb to be changed every 6 months... that is a lot of downsides to deal with, and just doubling the filtration and reducing the fish load, and staying regular with water changes will do enough...