I have a small tank - about 15L - yes, I know that's tiny but that's all I have space for. The tank previously had goldfish in it, but after they died (eek!) the tank was left fallow with the pump turned off for about 6 months and was a green soup of algae. I rescued the plants and filter media but I figured the gravel would have been anerobic for some time, so I took it out sterilized it. I put everything back in the tank, filled it up and left it running for a week before introducing three Neon Tetras into it on Saturday. After some research I now realise I should have cycled the tank *first* - duh!, so I've got a test kit and tested the water over the last 2 days - day 3 & 4 after the fish were introduced. I've also added some Tetra SafeStart yesterday. The readings over the last 2 days have been:
pH 6.8 6.6
NH3 0.0 0.0
NO2- 0.5 0.5
NO3- 5.0 0.0
Although the fish seem perfectly happy, the N02- is a little high so I've done a 25% water change, left the tank for a couple of hours & retested, and the NO2- is unchanged - with a 25% change I'd have expected *some* sort of drop. Any ideas as to why the NO2- hasn't budged? is this normal? Does the SafeStart contain a source of NO2- to keep the bacteria it contains happy?
Also when I tested I was expecting to see at least *some* NH3 but it is zero. I'm assuming (hoping!) that this is because I reused the filter media & plants from the old tank and the tank is quite heavily planted (considering its size). Or is it possible that the NH3 spike is still to come?
I'm determined not to lose any of these fish if I can possibly help it, so I'd be grateful for any suggestions or comments, thanks!
pH 6.8 6.6
NH3 0.0 0.0
NO2- 0.5 0.5
NO3- 5.0 0.0
Although the fish seem perfectly happy, the N02- is a little high so I've done a 25% water change, left the tank for a couple of hours & retested, and the NO2- is unchanged - with a 25% change I'd have expected *some* sort of drop. Any ideas as to why the NO2- hasn't budged? is this normal? Does the SafeStart contain a source of NO2- to keep the bacteria it contains happy?
Also when I tested I was expecting to see at least *some* NH3 but it is zero. I'm assuming (hoping!) that this is because I reused the filter media & plants from the old tank and the tank is quite heavily planted (considering its size). Or is it possible that the NH3 spike is still to come?
I'm determined not to lose any of these fish if I can possibly help it, so I'd be grateful for any suggestions or comments, thanks!