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#1
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And many after that, every time you change something in the tank this will happen. It took 6 month to completely cycle my tank before i put any SPS in it. If you just want fish you are ok after few weeks. |
#2
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![]() I hope you have an established tank to look at while you are wating !
or maybe a fresh water tank at the least. |
#3
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![]() mines 3 months old and i have sps.
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Can't is the cancer of happen - charlie sheen 20g reef 25g sump, DIY led form modular led, 2 false percs ![]() |
#4
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![]() What's this cycle thing you are talking about? Was I supposed to wait to put stuff in my tank?
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#5
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Water test this morning... I clearly have 0.25ppm nitrites! yesterday it was way higher, so I'm on the right end of the curve! I also inoculated the tank with a couple of pieces of seed live-rock that I bought from one of the bigger stores, so I'm getting a pretty fierce diatom bloom too. |
#6
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![]() Hold on is that your first piece of live rock?
__________________
Can't is the cancer of happen - charlie sheen 20g reef 25g sump, DIY led form modular led, 2 false percs ![]() |
#7
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![]() It was yeah, but I have already removed it. Stupid thing sprouted three teeny weeny baby aiptasia after a week. Last time I buy rock from a big store's holding tank. I think I got it out before they were big enough to spread thankfully.
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#8
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![]() You need live rock to seed your base rock. Live rock has a lot of beneficial bacteria and life in it your not getting any other way. I'm not sure if you can have fish in it yet. Someone with more experience than I will chime in.
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#9
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The bacteria families that turn ammonia into nitrite and then nitrite into nitrate are ubiquitous in the environment, they're on your skin, on the ground, generally in the ether. If you fill up any vessel of water (fresh or salt), provide some flow, a surface for them to colonize, and a source of ammonia, you will eventually get a functioning nitrifying bacterial filter - assuming you're not starting in a completely sterile environment that is. However, that takes a long a$$ time without help, as you need to wait for an initially tiny starting population of bacteria to expand enough to measurably process waste. That's why there are products that claim to add large populations of the desirable bacteria from the start to get things going, like Dr. Tim's and Prodibio start-up. I did add 250ml of Dr. Tim's when I started, and I think it probably got me over my ammonia hump a few days earlier than it otherwise would have, but it didn't seem to help one lick with the nitrites. Maybe all the nitrite eaters in the Dr Tim's starved to death before there was enough in the water for them to consume or something. Either way, you can get a biological filter that is totally appropriate for both corals and fish without ever adding any real 'live' rock, it just takes waaaaaaaay longer for things to stabilize. What you don't get any of with a freshly cycled tank full of previously dead marco rock, is anaerobic denitrifying bacteria in the deepest pores of the rock that take nitrates (the end process of nitrification) and break it down into nitrogen gas. So in my case, my nitrates will continue to rise until I find some other way of removing them. You also don't get any of the small nearly borderline microscopic crustaceans and worms that fill the ecological niches between the fish and the bacteria, or any of the micro and macro algaes that add nitrogen fixing capacity, diatoms, fungi, viruses, or much diversity in bacterial populations that works to keep things stable. Basically, you have a filter, and not an ecosystem. For that you need an outside seed source, which is why I added a small piece of really fresh rock from a local store (it hadn't even finished curing yet) so that I could kick start the diatom bloom that every tank goes through. I only got a tiny piece because I've been burned before and I don't trust any rock that's spent time in a large, retail rock holding facility, as those places are literally aiptasia factories. Lo and behold, this one sprouted aiptasia within a week of going in my tank, so it was turfed. It was enough time for the diatoms to do their thing though. What I will be doing to create the 'ecosystem', is adding 50 more pounds of live rock from Walt Smith that is being ordered for me directly from Walt Smith. That is to say that the rock I'll put in my tank will have not touched water between leaving Walt Smith's facility, and going in my tank. It will be uncured when I put it in, which is why I've heavily pre-cycled 200 pounds of marco rock, which will, fingers crossed, be enough of a filter to keep ammonia levels in my tank down while the walt smith rock cures, which will prevent as much extra die-off as possible. |
#10
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![]() Quote:
__________________
Can't is the cancer of happen - charlie sheen 20g reef 25g sump, DIY led form modular led, 2 false percs ![]() |