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#41
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#42
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Take care. |
#43
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![]() To quote someone else.
"To answer your specific question, salt creep is the salt deposit that is left behind after water evaporates. Running water always causes a little bit of a splash. Those splashes turn into a really fine mist which clings to surfaces near the source. It dries, salt gets left behind and the process continues. As the salt crystals 'grow' the white flake like stuff "creeps" around on your tank. " |
#44
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I do understand that people want to be safe than sorry when they recommend adding livestock slowly and that I'm just nitpicking. References Below http://faq.thekrib.com/begin-cycling.html "The nitrogen cycle can be sped up or ``jump started'' in a number of ways. Unfortunately, they require access to an established tank, which a beginning aquarist may not have available. The basic idea is to find an established tank, take some of the bacteria out of it and place them in the new tank. "More recently, products containing colonies of nitrifying bacteria have become available at pet shops (e.g., ``Fritz'', ``Bio-zyme'', ``Cycle''). In theory, adding the bacteria jump-starts the colonization process as above." "Some (not many) aquarium stores will provide aquarium buyers with a cup of gravel from an established tank." http://www.algone.com/fishless_cycling.htm "then simply feed the tank with fish food. The decaying food will release ammonia and the tank starts the cycling process. To further speed up this process the tank can be seeded with gravel from an existing tank, filter cartridges from established filters, filter media of any kind, biowheels, drift wood, rocks, all taken from established tanks. Bacteria colonize all of the above, so seeding basically means the introduction of existing bacteria colonies into a new tank. The decaying food will provide ammonia for these colonies to settle and expand in the new tank. " http://www.simplifiedreefkeeping.com/faq/12.htm "One factor to consider: the amount of die-off on live sand is unpredictable. " . |