I'm wondering if I need as many bio balls as I currently have to cover the ammonia produced by my one fish?
I have bio balls in my hob filter and also in my canister filter?
I'm thinking I'm using too much, because if these bio balls help reduce ammonia and nitrite, I would think that based off the finite ammonia being produced by my one fish in the tank I have, then maybe after a point, extra bio balls don't really help with anything?
Or does it work this way, where bacteria (regardless of how much ammonia is produced) continue to develop on these bio-balls?
I have bio balls in my hob filter and also in my canister filter?
I'm thinking I'm using too much, because if these bio balls help reduce ammonia and nitrite, I would think that based off the finite ammonia being produced by my one fish in the tank I have, then maybe after a point, extra bio balls don't really help with anything?
Or does it work this way, where bacteria (regardless of how much ammonia is produced) continue to develop on these bio-balls?