BzztYeow
New Member
I had a couple of natural sponges laying around in an old hermit crab cage - i think my smoking killed the crabs .
They are about half fist sized and i thought that while my tank was a bit overcrowded (waiting for the larger to arrive) i would throw them into the tank as a media for the cycling bacteria.
They sit on the back of my 20 gallon- over a bubble wall- kept in place by a piece of driftwood pinning them to the back wall.
The large tank arrived a few days ago- i set up the substrate, filter, heater, and other mess and threw two kenyi's in there to get the Nitro cycle going. I also put a couple of glasses filled with substrate into the new 60 gal tank. The ammonia spiked an cycled to under .25mg/L within two days, but the nitrites skyrocketed above the scale of my test kit.
Then i tried something odd. I took two of the three sponges i had in the old tank and squeezed them multiple times in the new, larger tanks. It made them cloudy for a couple of hours, but the next day-BANG the nitrites and ammonia are zeroed! I though i made a mistake in the testing so i triple checked it- but the dang tank seems to have cycled within 1 week!
I'm wondering if anyone has experience with natural (dead) sponges in freshwater tanks. Do they rot and release nasties or is having a couple of sponges laying around in you tank a good idea?
I haven't read anything about sponge filters that use NATURAL sponge, they all seem to use a manufactured sponge material (which i assume would not rot). I was amazed by the nitrite reduction in the new tank that wringing these natural sponges produced. I was almost half convinced they were just causing problems in the old tank with their decay.
Is there a danger I am missing with these natural sponges? They have only been submerged about 1 month in the old tank. They seem to be great way to help a new tank cycle, but i don't wan't to keep them submerged if they will cause problems later.
Thanks for any advice!
They are about half fist sized and i thought that while my tank was a bit overcrowded (waiting for the larger to arrive) i would throw them into the tank as a media for the cycling bacteria.
They sit on the back of my 20 gallon- over a bubble wall- kept in place by a piece of driftwood pinning them to the back wall.
The large tank arrived a few days ago- i set up the substrate, filter, heater, and other mess and threw two kenyi's in there to get the Nitro cycle going. I also put a couple of glasses filled with substrate into the new 60 gal tank. The ammonia spiked an cycled to under .25mg/L within two days, but the nitrites skyrocketed above the scale of my test kit.
Then i tried something odd. I took two of the three sponges i had in the old tank and squeezed them multiple times in the new, larger tanks. It made them cloudy for a couple of hours, but the next day-BANG the nitrites and ammonia are zeroed! I though i made a mistake in the testing so i triple checked it- but the dang tank seems to have cycled within 1 week!
I'm wondering if anyone has experience with natural (dead) sponges in freshwater tanks. Do they rot and release nasties or is having a couple of sponges laying around in you tank a good idea?
I haven't read anything about sponge filters that use NATURAL sponge, they all seem to use a manufactured sponge material (which i assume would not rot). I was amazed by the nitrite reduction in the new tank that wringing these natural sponges produced. I was almost half convinced they were just causing problems in the old tank with their decay.
Is there a danger I am missing with these natural sponges? They have only been submerged about 1 month in the old tank. They seem to be great way to help a new tank cycle, but i don't wan't to keep them submerged if they will cause problems later.
Thanks for any advice!