I've been setting up a 28 litre tank for my daughter to keep dwarf frogs. It's been running now for about 2 weeks, and the plan was to change the water, add some mature media and a couple of small fish from the community tank this week, and then get the frogs in a few weeks.
Before adding the media or fish, I tested the water. Ammonia zero, pH normal. As we have traces of nitrite in our tap water, I was wondering if it would show in the tank, or whether the filter would have started dealing with it - but was very surprised that the nitrite reading was about 1.2. I tested the tap water, which reads 0.1 as usual, and even re-tested the tank, in case something had been contaminated, and it was still 1.2 ish.
Obviously I'm not going to add fish to this , but I'm wondering where the nitrite has come from? Would a few dead leaves on the plants have generated enough ammonia to produce this? Any suggestions for where else it could have come from? I was going to do a big water change, but now I'm thinking I might leave it a few days and see what happens?
The tank has play sand, plastic 'driftwood', a few rounded pebbles which we pH tested (excellent science for a 10-year-old), a plastic saucer, and a few days ago I added 3 plants (a cutting from the community tank and 2 from a shop). It's got a small internal filter with black sponge and some filter floss I added to help clear the water. A heater keeps it at 23 C, and the light is on a few hours a day for the plants. Water conditioner, plant feed, same as I use in the community tank.
Before adding the media or fish, I tested the water. Ammonia zero, pH normal. As we have traces of nitrite in our tap water, I was wondering if it would show in the tank, or whether the filter would have started dealing with it - but was very surprised that the nitrite reading was about 1.2. I tested the tap water, which reads 0.1 as usual, and even re-tested the tank, in case something had been contaminated, and it was still 1.2 ish.
Obviously I'm not going to add fish to this , but I'm wondering where the nitrite has come from? Would a few dead leaves on the plants have generated enough ammonia to produce this? Any suggestions for where else it could have come from? I was going to do a big water change, but now I'm thinking I might leave it a few days and see what happens?
The tank has play sand, plastic 'driftwood', a few rounded pebbles which we pH tested (excellent science for a 10-year-old), a plastic saucer, and a few days ago I added 3 plants (a cutting from the community tank and 2 from a shop). It's got a small internal filter with black sponge and some filter floss I added to help clear the water. A heater keeps it at 23 C, and the light is on a few hours a day for the plants. Water conditioner, plant feed, same as I use in the community tank.