For my two cents
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I like Jed, dont do "deep cleans" either. Once a year I pull all of the stuff out of the tank, give the EE a stir and if it needs it, I add another brick and take a bit of the old out. During the week I simply scoop out the EE that gets in the pools and put it back on top the substrate---you should see them RUN to eat this stuff, theyd rather eat this slightly stinky EE than their food!!! I then just refill the water, feed 'em, and reorganize the tank. Nothing is scrubbed, cleaned...anything, ever, other than the food dishes of course. I think when you give completely new substrate it sends their ecosystem in that tank for whirl, everything they have worked so hard to build up---bacteria, natural decomp of the EE, all of that is gone and has to be re-established. I also add natural elements to the tank, they get branches from outside, dandelion leaves and flowers directly from outside...I inspect them, give the leaves and flowers a shake and into the tank they go. I think it makes a big difference in the health of the tank to allow natural cycles to occur such as decomp...we shouldnt be afraid of it or try to prevent it.
With decomp, I dont think its that the EE can be blamed for decomping the molter. Ive had crabs under molting for 3-4 months, some have left windows for that amount of time. At no time, when they were in the moistest area of the EE under the water dishes, did decomp occur. I do however agree that EE has the potential for more bacteria than sand just because it is biodegradable and therefore things that are dead or sit stagnant in the soil will disappear after a long amount of time. So your molter dies during the process and naturally starts to decompose anyways and the soil helps it along....heck it might even gain beneficial bacteria FROM the decomposing dead crab. *shrug*
Im not saying that I dont have crab deaths during molt either, I do, I just dont have the luxury of finding them when I stir the substrate....which is just fine with me. Id rather have the dead ones decompose or even get eaten by the others than me finding them and throwing them out in the trash. If the soil or my crabs will benefit from their fallen friend, then that is more important...not that I ever see them eating them either, Im just assuming that happens with the ones digging around when they encounter a dead one. (besides I cant put them in my garden for fertilizer....apparently squirrels like to eat dead crabs :roll: )