I have an established 30 gallon tank that has a standard Hang-On-Back filter. I used to run an air stone in this tank, but I have since opted for secondary filtration, and now I use a sponge filter *instead of* an air stone. They both bubble and oxygenate the water, so why not? It's additional filtration, in addition to oxygenation.
Question:
After running this sponge as a secondary filter for several days or a week, or whatever amount of time it takes for the bacteria colony to latch-on to the sponge, would moving it to a new tank help the new tank cycle faster? (I've had this sponge in there for 2 weeks, and I'm thinking about stealing it for a new tank, and replacing it with a new one in the established tank)
Have I just discovered a way to seed sponge filters and make new tanks cycle faster? Or does moving the sponge filter to a new tank with new substrate and new plants/decor kill it's bacteria colony?
Question:
After running this sponge as a secondary filter for several days or a week, or whatever amount of time it takes for the bacteria colony to latch-on to the sponge, would moving it to a new tank help the new tank cycle faster? (I've had this sponge in there for 2 weeks, and I'm thinking about stealing it for a new tank, and replacing it with a new one in the established tank)
Have I just discovered a way to seed sponge filters and make new tanks cycle faster? Or does moving the sponge filter to a new tank with new substrate and new plants/decor kill it's bacteria colony?
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