jonchall
New Member
Hello all...
I have just recently gotten back into fishkeeping after a 15 year hiatus, which is why my 50 gallon is currently being cycled with fish--there was no such thing as fishless cycling when I was last into this hobby. After setting the tank up and MUCH additional research (most of which was within the posts on this forum--thank you everyone!), I have purchased a 36 gallon corner bowfront tank, which I am currently cycling fishless. I have several questions about the cycling process that I have not been able to find a definitive answer on.
Current Stats:
36 US Gallon (136 Litre) | Fishless
Filter: Fluval 305
--- Original Filter Setup: 3 chambers of the ceramic ring Biomx Media | 3 chambers of activated carbon packs
--- Setup Changed on 7/16/2009: 4 chambers of the ceramic ring Biomx Media | 2 chambers of bio balls (I have a good feeling I discarded some bacteria along with the carbon packs)
Water Conditions:
Temp: 88F (31C)
pH: 7.8
NH3/NH4: 5ppm
NO2: 0ppm
NO3: 0ppm
Notes:
This tank has been cycling since 7/4/2009 (18 days now). The first day I added ammonia (Ace Hardware 10% Ammonium Hydroxide) to a level of 7ppm, which settled down to about 4.5ppm after 12 hours and stayed there for 4 days until it gradually reduced to 1ppm over the course of 3 days. I changed my filter media setup to swap the carbon for more biological surface area, which I believe interrupted my cycle. I'm more concerned that I have the right media installed than how long the cycle will take. I am now waiting for the ammonia level to drop down again--it's been at 5ppm since the carbon swap out 6 days ago. What I would really like to know (and have read conflicting suggestions/statements about) is:
1) Should I be cycling with the lights on / lights off / lights on a timer for X hours per day? Right now they are off.
2) I've read that a lower pH (around 6-6.2 or so) will stall a cycle. Is my pH at 7.8 okay? Is there a high-end stall point?
3) I've read all sorts of things about the proper temperature for fishless cycling. Is my 88F (31C) okay?
4) I've read that aeration is good for the cycling process. My Fluval is running full blast (it states 185 gph which is roughly 5x), and I have 2 medium air stones and one airstone wall running full blast. Is there such a thing as too much aeration?
50 US Gallon (189 Litre) | Fish In
Inhabitants:
--- 1 Green Terror ~2"
--- 1 Blood Parrot ~2.5"
--- 5 Giant Danios ~1.5" to 2"
Filter: 2X Whisper 45EX
--- Original Filter Setup: activated carbon in both filters
--- Setup Changed on 7/18/2009: 1 filter with activated carbon | 1 filter with DIY fabricated polyester sponge media
Water Conditions:
Temp: 78F (26C)
pH: 6.8 - steady for three weeks thus far
NH3/NH4: 0ppm
NO2: 0ppm
NO3: 0ppm
Notes:
I've had this tank running since 6/26/2009, and was originally dosed with Stress Coat+ and Stress Zyme. The next day (6/27/2009), however, I decided to use SeaChem Stability in lieu of Stress Zyme. Added Green Terror and Blood Parrot on 6/30/2009 after ammonia had lowered to under 1ppm (it was very close to pure yellow on API Master Test Kit). After adding the fish, the ammonia increased to .2ppm for two days, then dropped to 0.0ppm. From that day forward, I have had an ammonia level of 0.0. I added the Giant Danios on 7/4/2009 to perhaps kickstart the cycle, but have continued to register 0.0ppm of ammonia. I did decide to change the activated carbon filter packs over to a form of bio media, and since Whisper offers nothing of the sort, I got a square of polyester pond media and cut it to fit the filter frame. I'm only doing one filter at a time in case the carbon filter packs had any bacteria started on them. When I did this, the ammonia did jump to about 0.1 for a day and a half, but then went back to 0.0. Occasionally, I will check for nitrites and nitrates, but I have never registered anything on either. I figure that the fish must be producing ammonia, and if my readings are constantly 0.0ppm, the ammonia must be getting converted to nitrites--and the same for nitrites to nitrates. What has me stumped is that, as well as I remember from my past days of fishkeeping, by this point (3 weeks after adding fish) I was usually doing dialy or twice daily water changes to keep nitrites down as the ammonia part of the cycle had come and gone. So, if anyone can shed some light or offer their opinion on the following, I would be greatly appreciative:
1) Could the SeaChem Stability be holding these levels in check and providing a slower, yet entirely more safe, cycle?
2) I would assume that even one of those fish in a 50 gallon tank would be producing some level of ammonia. I do feed them sparingly. Usually 2 to 3 times a day, as much as they can eat in about 1 minute--4 floating Hikari Cichlid Gold mini pellets and a small pinch of Omega One Super Color flakes. Occasionally, I will substitute a small bit of freeze dried brine shrimp which the Danios really love, or a small chunk of a homemade frozen cube. Would the number and size of the fish (being small) have anything to do with the ammonia level being 0.0ppm? I just have a hard time believing that.
3) Could the original dose of Stress Coat+ still be detoxifying the ammonia? I have not changed the water yet as I have been afraid to cause a spike, but I have topped off some evaporation (about 2 gallons 1 time) and added a small, quantity appropriate dose of Stress Coat+ to the new water before adding it to the tank.
4) Possibly #1 is correct (the Stability theory), and by changing one of the filter's carbon pack to a sponge type media (and thereby destroying a portion of the slowly building bacteria colony), I set the cycle back a week or so. Does this sound viable?
To me, it is just weird that I have no ammonia, nitrites, or nitrates after three weeks of having fish in the tank. I'm not really complaining, however, since this has led me to formulate a new strategy--it this trend continues. If these levels stay in check until my 36 gallon has completed the fishless cycle, I plan on rehoming the fish to that tank temporarily, cleaning the 50 gallon, and starting a fishless cycle in that one.
Any opinions or adivce is greatly welcomed! Also, please do not hesitate to ask for any additional info I may have left out.
I have just recently gotten back into fishkeeping after a 15 year hiatus, which is why my 50 gallon is currently being cycled with fish--there was no such thing as fishless cycling when I was last into this hobby. After setting the tank up and MUCH additional research (most of which was within the posts on this forum--thank you everyone!), I have purchased a 36 gallon corner bowfront tank, which I am currently cycling fishless. I have several questions about the cycling process that I have not been able to find a definitive answer on.
Current Stats:
36 US Gallon (136 Litre) | Fishless
Filter: Fluval 305
--- Original Filter Setup: 3 chambers of the ceramic ring Biomx Media | 3 chambers of activated carbon packs
--- Setup Changed on 7/16/2009: 4 chambers of the ceramic ring Biomx Media | 2 chambers of bio balls (I have a good feeling I discarded some bacteria along with the carbon packs)
Water Conditions:
Temp: 88F (31C)
pH: 7.8
NH3/NH4: 5ppm
NO2: 0ppm
NO3: 0ppm
Notes:
This tank has been cycling since 7/4/2009 (18 days now). The first day I added ammonia (Ace Hardware 10% Ammonium Hydroxide) to a level of 7ppm, which settled down to about 4.5ppm after 12 hours and stayed there for 4 days until it gradually reduced to 1ppm over the course of 3 days. I changed my filter media setup to swap the carbon for more biological surface area, which I believe interrupted my cycle. I'm more concerned that I have the right media installed than how long the cycle will take. I am now waiting for the ammonia level to drop down again--it's been at 5ppm since the carbon swap out 6 days ago. What I would really like to know (and have read conflicting suggestions/statements about) is:
1) Should I be cycling with the lights on / lights off / lights on a timer for X hours per day? Right now they are off.
2) I've read that a lower pH (around 6-6.2 or so) will stall a cycle. Is my pH at 7.8 okay? Is there a high-end stall point?
3) I've read all sorts of things about the proper temperature for fishless cycling. Is my 88F (31C) okay?
4) I've read that aeration is good for the cycling process. My Fluval is running full blast (it states 185 gph which is roughly 5x), and I have 2 medium air stones and one airstone wall running full blast. Is there such a thing as too much aeration?
50 US Gallon (189 Litre) | Fish In
Inhabitants:
--- 1 Green Terror ~2"
--- 1 Blood Parrot ~2.5"
--- 5 Giant Danios ~1.5" to 2"
Filter: 2X Whisper 45EX
--- Original Filter Setup: activated carbon in both filters
--- Setup Changed on 7/18/2009: 1 filter with activated carbon | 1 filter with DIY fabricated polyester sponge media
Water Conditions:
Temp: 78F (26C)
pH: 6.8 - steady for three weeks thus far
NH3/NH4: 0ppm
NO2: 0ppm
NO3: 0ppm
Notes:
I've had this tank running since 6/26/2009, and was originally dosed with Stress Coat+ and Stress Zyme. The next day (6/27/2009), however, I decided to use SeaChem Stability in lieu of Stress Zyme. Added Green Terror and Blood Parrot on 6/30/2009 after ammonia had lowered to under 1ppm (it was very close to pure yellow on API Master Test Kit). After adding the fish, the ammonia increased to .2ppm for two days, then dropped to 0.0ppm. From that day forward, I have had an ammonia level of 0.0. I added the Giant Danios on 7/4/2009 to perhaps kickstart the cycle, but have continued to register 0.0ppm of ammonia. I did decide to change the activated carbon filter packs over to a form of bio media, and since Whisper offers nothing of the sort, I got a square of polyester pond media and cut it to fit the filter frame. I'm only doing one filter at a time in case the carbon filter packs had any bacteria started on them. When I did this, the ammonia did jump to about 0.1 for a day and a half, but then went back to 0.0. Occasionally, I will check for nitrites and nitrates, but I have never registered anything on either. I figure that the fish must be producing ammonia, and if my readings are constantly 0.0ppm, the ammonia must be getting converted to nitrites--and the same for nitrites to nitrates. What has me stumped is that, as well as I remember from my past days of fishkeeping, by this point (3 weeks after adding fish) I was usually doing dialy or twice daily water changes to keep nitrites down as the ammonia part of the cycle had come and gone. So, if anyone can shed some light or offer their opinion on the following, I would be greatly appreciative:
1) Could the SeaChem Stability be holding these levels in check and providing a slower, yet entirely more safe, cycle?
2) I would assume that even one of those fish in a 50 gallon tank would be producing some level of ammonia. I do feed them sparingly. Usually 2 to 3 times a day, as much as they can eat in about 1 minute--4 floating Hikari Cichlid Gold mini pellets and a small pinch of Omega One Super Color flakes. Occasionally, I will substitute a small bit of freeze dried brine shrimp which the Danios really love, or a small chunk of a homemade frozen cube. Would the number and size of the fish (being small) have anything to do with the ammonia level being 0.0ppm? I just have a hard time believing that.
3) Could the original dose of Stress Coat+ still be detoxifying the ammonia? I have not changed the water yet as I have been afraid to cause a spike, but I have topped off some evaporation (about 2 gallons 1 time) and added a small, quantity appropriate dose of Stress Coat+ to the new water before adding it to the tank.
4) Possibly #1 is correct (the Stability theory), and by changing one of the filter's carbon pack to a sponge type media (and thereby destroying a portion of the slowly building bacteria colony), I set the cycle back a week or so. Does this sound viable?
To me, it is just weird that I have no ammonia, nitrites, or nitrates after three weeks of having fish in the tank. I'm not really complaining, however, since this has led me to formulate a new strategy--it this trend continues. If these levels stay in check until my 36 gallon has completed the fishless cycle, I plan on rehoming the fish to that tank temporarily, cleaning the 50 gallon, and starting a fishless cycle in that one.
Any opinions or adivce is greatly welcomed! Also, please do not hesitate to ask for any additional info I may have left out.