Contarary to popular belief of LFS staff, the fewer the fish during the set-up stage the better
The more fish, the more Ammonia and Nitrite, the more the risk of loosing or seriously damaging the health of your fish
If you have Ammonia present from the fish you have, there is enough load to cycle the tank. Don't add more untill Ammonia and Nitrite have read nil for a week before you add more
All the best
Rabbut
Ok then what's with the post saying you need 25% of your total stocking for your tank to cycle? Is that not true?
How about the fact that I've had .25 ppm for ammonia for about three weeks without any real increase?
It seems like there's a lot of schools of thought that contradict each other on this forum and it's tough to sort out sometimes.
OK, let me try to explain the logic behind my reasoning of less is more
Filter bacteria can multiply at a constant rate if excess Ammonia and/or nitrite is available. This means that to cycle a tank to consume 1ppm of ammonia in 24hours will take exactly the same time if you add back up to 5ppm each day, as it would if you add upto 1ppm each day. More food won't speed growth, in fact in some extream cases where Ammonia gets above about 8ppm, the excess food will start to poison the filter bacteria aswell. It's ironic that the organisums we rely on to remove Ammonia are sencitive to Ammonia poisoning themselves....
What effects growth rates for filter bacteria? Many things. The most commonly touted are Oxygen levels, pH level, Temperature and the number of filter bacteria in the water you use to fill the tank. Long story short, your filter bacteria come initially from the water you use to fill the tank if you don't use mature media to start off. Under ideal situations, the filter bacteria can double in colony size in 24 hours.
So, basically, filter bacteria conony size will continue to grow as fast as possible, regardless of tank loads, just so long as there is Ammonia available. Adding more fish just leads to more ammonia in the tank and more risk to the fish that are in the tank undergoing the cycling process for you
The cycle for the current load will take just as long, though adding more fish will increase the cycle-time by a few days, again increasing the risk factor.
It seems like there's a lot of schools of thought that contradict each other on this forum and it's tough to sort out sometimes.
there are no rules in fishkeeping (well maybe a few)
I guess maybe I should rephrase my question.
What would make my tank finish cycling faster? Leaving the two tetras as is and hoping I finally see some nitrites soon? Or getting a fish more fish in hope that it will kick start things?
By the way, I have filter media from an established tank in there for about a week and I've used Stress Zyme and I still haven't seen anything other than just .25 ppm of ammonia and absolutely no nitrites in three weeks.
There are no rules to fishkeeping, but there are many "best practice" guidelines touted to keep beginners "safe"
To get the tank to cycle faster, try to get hold of some filter media from a mature tank. Other than this, there is little you can do to speed along the cycle
Keeping the tank as warm as your current species will tollerate and increaseing surface agetation may help a little, but reaults from this won't be as spectacular as mature media
All the best
Rabbut