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#1
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![]() Any thoughts or opinions on how long I would need to leave live rock in an aquarium to seed dry rock? using a few pieces from another tank to seed this new one but want to ultimately remove them
Thanks VR |
#2
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![]() Here's my experience, I did the same thing basically. so put your live rock in and let it cycle then add your livestock very very slowly, basically the dry rock will slowly build up
It's bacterial base. The dry rock will seed slowly. If there's no ammonia then there won't be any reason for bacteria to develop. So my advice would be move very slowly at first Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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50G Starfire Reef |
#3
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![]() For what purpose? To seed aerobic bacteria to convert ammonia to nitrate? To seed anaerobic bacteria to convert nitrate to nitrogen gas (completing the cycle)? To seed the dry rock with pods and other critters? For aerobic bacteria, a few weeks is enough, and you'll get plenty of pods and critters in that time too. For anaerobic bacteria you're looking at months.
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#4
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![]() I'd go so far as suggesting that's optimistic.
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Brad |
#5
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![]() I've used DIY or dry rock for the last few tanks, and the seeding goes quite quickly. I never had a problem with a build up of Nitrate. The trouble is getting rid of the PO4 in the dry rock, that can take a very long time. I would say at lease a year before you're completely rid of it. My next tank will be cooked live rock.
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#6
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![]() Haha, yeah I was feeling optimistic this morning. Fwiw, I can't stand dry rock (or LEDs lol).
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#7
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#8
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![]() Quote:
Cheers VR |
#9
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![]() Quote:
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#10
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![]() From my experience with the 3 tanks I started this way, for fish you don't have to do anything different than you would with live rock, as long as you're seeding with live rock. Just start with a small bio-load and slowly work your way up. The rock colonizes with bacteria quite quickly, I never had a problem with ammonia nitrite or nitrate.
For corals you will likely have to wait until the PO4 drops before you can give them enough light. Especially with the last tank, the dry rocks were always covered in algae, while the live rock I seeded with had no growth. |
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