字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 We have two types of filtration in this backyard water garden. We have mechanical filtration of the skimmer taking leaves and debris out of the pond. As leaves fall in except for a few places where they're gonna get caught in the other plants they're going to float around on the surface like this one here. They're gonna float into this skimmer box. The skimmer has the pump and also in front of it has a net bag and it has filter material that removes the leaves and the bigger material like this. So we've got all the leaves and debris being trapped in here. So the mechanical filtration is going on in this filter. The biological filtration is going on in the rocks and gravel in the pond. Biological filtration is the breakdown of the nutrients. The fish are releasing ammonia into the water every time they breath. The ammonia is toxic to the fish, that's why they're getting rid of it. Bacteria growing in the rocks and gravel consume that ammonia as food. They release nitrite which is also toxic to the fish and other bacteria that consume that as food release nitrates, which are feeding the plants. So we have mechanical filtration and biological filtration The entire pond is part of the filter. Rather than depending on a little tiny box connected to a pump to try and do all of your filtration, the filtration in this pond is being done everywhere in the pond. The aquatic plants that are annuals need to be taken out of the pond in the fall because they're going to decay in the pond and put a lot of waste materials in the pond, a lot of dirt and that would end up building up to a big sludge layer. We don't want to have that happen so in the fall as we get towards frost all these aquatic plants like the water lettuce are going to die. They're doing a great job filtering the pond in the summertime but they're going to become a liability in the fall so we're going to take these things and we're gonna toss them out. They're useless in the wintertime. Perennial plants like the Lysimachia, the Starfruit, the Arrowhead, we're gonna take the leaves and stems off that die because we don't want those things decay in the pond, but otherwise we're gonna leave the root systems of those plants in here. The water lettuce and water hyacinths, we're gonna just toss out into the shrubs in our dry land perennial bed