Banafish
Fish Fanatic
This question also goes for Seachem Flourish and Flourish Excel. Thanks!
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Flourish Excel should not be used, period.
Are you not supposed to have plants in the tank during fishless cycling? I have already put the plants in, but haven't started to add a source of ammonium.Flourish Excel should not be used, period.
Flourish should only be used if there are plants. If there are no plants during cycling, why use a plant fertiliser?
Prime detoxifies ammonia and will slow the cycle. However, the detoxification wears off after something like 24 to 36 hours.
If this is a fishless cycle, don't add more than the dose rate on the bottle, and don't add any more during the cycle.
But if it's a fish-in cycle and you are doing water changes whenever ammonia or nitrite read above zero, use Prime but be prepared for the cycle to take longer.
Are you not supposed to have plants in the tank during fishless cycling? I have already put the plants in, but haven't started to add a source of ammonium.
Bryon, just a quick one as do not want to hijack, but in this case, what happens to the nitrite then? By the time the plants take up the ammonia, is the nitrite eating bacteria ready to go to work to complete the cycle?With plants present, I do not recommend adding any ammonia. Some plants can tolerate ammonia to quite high levels, but others cannot. Some will die at just 1 ppm. If you have live plants, and they are growing, you would be better doing a "silent" plant cycle. There is an article on this in the cycling section.
I have used live plants in all my tanks for 30 years. I have never "cycled" a tank adding ammonia, and the fish went in with no issues. I do it in one day, but I know what I'm doing. Caution if new to this is not a problem, and waiting a few days to ensure the plants are growing and not dying is fine. Floating plants are ideal here, they are ammonia sinks. [meaning ammonia from fish]
Bryon, just a quick one as do not want to hijack, but in this case, what happens to the nitrite then? By the time the plants take up the ammonia, is the nitrite eating bacteria ready to go to work to complete the cycle?
FishlessFishless or fish in cycling?
With plants present, I do not recommend adding any ammonia. Some plants can tolerate ammonia to quite high levels, but others cannot. Some will die at just 1 ppm. If you have live plants, and they are growing, you would be better doing a "silent" plant cycle. There is an article on this in the cycling section.
I have used live plants in all my tanks for 30 years. I have never "cycled" a tank adding ammonia, and the fish went in with no issues. I do it in one day, but I know what I'm doing. Caution if new to this is not a problem, and waiting a few days to ensure the plants are growing and not dying is fine. Floating plants are ideal here, they are ammonia sinks. [meaning ammonia from fish]
And also, fish add ammonia gradually to the tank. Which is how plants absorb it. Adding ammonia all at once can overwhelm the plants.With plants present, I do not recommend adding any ammonia. Some plants can tolerate ammonia to quite high levels, but others cannot. Some will die at just 1 ppm. If you have live plants, and they are growing, you would be better doing a "silent" plant cycle. There is an article on this in the cycling section.
I have used live plants in all my tanks for 30 years. I have never "cycled" a tank adding ammonia, and the fish went in with no issues. I do it in one day, but I know what I'm doing. Caution if new to this is not a problem, and waiting a few days to ensure the plants are growing and not dying is fine. Floating plants are ideal here, they are ammonia sinks. [meaning ammonia from fish]
Hi, I currently have 7 plants in my tank and I am planning on getting more. I do not know the species of the plants I have (except 1 - the hornwort/coontail), so I was hoping the forum could help me identify them? Thanks. I have photos attached below. Sorry the water is cloudy, it has been 5 days since the setup so I am thinking of getting some Seachem Clarity?We usually advise to either do a plant cycle, or plant the tank after doing a fishless cycle for the reasons Byron mentioned.
It also depends on what type of plant and how many of them. Just one or two slow growing plants are not enough for a plant cycle as they will not be able to remove the ammonia made by a tankful of fish. Your photo looks as though there is one plant in the tank, though the photo is too small to see what it is.
Can you tell us what the plant is, please, and how many more you plan on having. It may be that if you want just the odd plant you'd be better using ammonia and replacing the plant if the ammonia damages it. But if you do plan more, then get them soon and do a plant cycle. This involves using lots of fast growing plants. The tank is planted then we wait until the plants are actively growing before adding fish a batch at a time. The easy way to judge plant growth is by taking a photo of the newly planted tank so you can see the difference over time.