$r$ is parameter. Pick coprime $m,n\in[r,2r]$ with $mn$ even. Consider the Linear Diophantine Equation $$a^4u+b^4v+c^2z=0$$ where $a=m^2-n^2$, $b=2mn$ and $c=m^2+n^2$.

1. Is it true that there are constants $$\alpha,\beta,\gamma,\delta>0$$ such that 
$$|u|,|v|<\alpha r^2\implies|z|>\beta r^6$$
$$|z|<\gamma r^6\implies|u|+|v|>\delta r^2$$
holds?

I think above is true for the following reason:

$a^4u+b^4v\bmod c^2$ seems to admit enough room to get $|u|,|v|>c>r^2$. Then since $a^4|u|,b^4|v|>r^{10}$ then it seems $r^6$ should be the lower bound for $|z|$. How to show this formally is unclear to me.

I tried playing with $a^4=m^8-4m^6n^2+6m^4n^4-4m^2n^6+n^8$ and $b^4=16m^4n^4$ and $c^2=m^4+2m^2n^2+n^4$. I can't seem to nail down enough relations to make a formal proof as done in https://mathoverflow.net/questions/357444/small-linear-relations-between-primitive-pythagorean-triples-mathsfii.

The relations I found gave following basis for solution space to $a^4u+b^4v+c^2z=0$:
$$v_1=(u,v,z)=(2m^2n^2,m^4+n^4,-(2m^2n^2)(m^4+2m^2n^2+n^4))$$
$$v_2=(u,v,z)=(8m^2n^2,3(m^4+n^4)-2m^2n^2,- 8m^2n^2).$$
These are not very illuminating. It is not clear if these constitute the reduced basis. 

2. In general is there algebraic methods to recover formal relations that guarantee reduced basis for $2$ and $3$ dimensional cases which will help looking for the full integral complement in null space so that lattice methods could be utilized as done in https://mathoverflow.net/questions/357444/small-linear-relations-between-primitive-pythagorean-triples-mathsfii?

[Lenstra-Lenstra-Lovasz](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenstra%E2%80%93Lenstra%E2%80%93Lov%C3%A1sz_lattice_basis_reduction_algorithm) suffices for 2.. However I think it will be an overkill here. Perhaps there is an algebraic technique?