Is ammonia cycling a new tank something I should look into or is it something I should avoid.
Is ammonia cycling a new tank something I should look into or is it something I should avoid.
-David-
That is the first part of the cycle. Hopefully you do not have any livestock.
Ammonia turns into nitrites which turns into nitrates. Cycle is then complete. You want to make sure you are not showing any ammonia or nitrites before slowly beginning to add live stock. HTH
http://www.millan.net/minimations/sm...riumsmile1.gif - Mike and Kristy -
"You're gonna need a bigger boat." Brody (Jaws)
Depends on what you are talking about, it is the first part of the nitrogen cycle of getting a tank ready, however you do not want to add pure ammonia to a tank. Something as simple as ghost feeding the tank will get the ammonia high enough to get everything started.
No I got no live stock, just a piece of coral that was on some live rock I got. I think it's either a zoa or a paly. There are around 4 to 6 heads that I can see. I only have about 2 lbs of live rock in my tank at the moment and I will be getting a sicce 3.5 or a 4. I'm also trying to find a way to keep the flasher wrasse's in the tank once I get them since they are jumpers. I think 60 to 80 lbs of live rock should be enough. I'm wanting to go with mostly tonga. Once I got all my live rock ill be dosing 6 ml of ammonia every other day as I was instructed.
Last edited by Reef Swimmer; Thu, 20th Jun 2013 at 10:35 AM.
-David-
Dosing the ammonia is as antiquated of a method as putting a damsel in the tank and hoping it doesn't die while everything cycles. How big is the tank? There is really no reason to put straight ammonia in, ghost feed the tank, when the food breaks down it turns into ammonia.
Who instructed you to do that?
Cycling a tank is like a balancing act, sure you could dose something, and then when the bacteria grows to consume the ammonia they will in turn produce nitrites, which will be taken care of by your bacteria that produces nitrates.
But then you stop dosing ammonia, and the bacterial circle of life falters and you're left with an out of wack filtration. Or, you add precisely the right amount of livestock that will produce close to the 6ml of ammonia you had been dosing... Any idea how you calculate that? Not to mention that livestock will need to be fed, which means you have to calculate the expected breakdown of unbeaten food...
Let your tank cycle with a little food to ghost feed your tank. Once you start showing nitrates, you can add fish or what ever slowly.
The reason we don't put a bucket load of fish into a new tank is because the filtration isn't equipped to handle it, so you bump it up slowly. The bacterial response to each addition takes time.
Bottom line, dosing ammonia, IMO, isn't a good idea.
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Reefing 210
Multi-Genera
Why do you say that? If you're starting with dry rock, I'd rather do this than use fish food. Dosing ammonia I can control how much of a cycle I have. I've done both, both give you the same end result, dosing ammonia just seems more precise. You do have to use the right ammonia (pure ammonia) which can be hard to find.
Master Reef Curmudgeon
Out of whack how? Sure, some bacteria may die off, but you still have the nitrifying bacteria you need in the tank. Also, what about cycling with live rock? That's how a lot of people still cycle their tank and it's FAR less precise than ammonia or fish food but it's also tried and true. Also, how much food should you put in?
Master Reef Curmudgeon
I agree, just how much should you put in?
I've never had to add anything to cycle a tank as its going to happen and a lesson in patience is one that will pay dividends later on.
And as you mentioned, there will be die off, and that's where you get a strong cycle with live rock that doesn't weather the transport or new tank well. If the rock and sand is sterile on the front end, any addition to the tank will get the process started. In fact if caution and patience is practiced you can start much earlier, adding that cuc or small fish. If there is nothing to die off, you won't get a cycle. It starts and filtration grows with the slow addition of livestock.
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Reefing 210
Multi-Genera