My nitrate reading, at its highest, has been up to 80 ppm and my fish stock have had no adverse reactions. I'm a member of another online fish/plant community named UKAPS and a lot there seem to think that a nitrate level of 200 ppm is normal and acceptable. I personally think that a nitrate level of 30-40 ppm is ample for plants in an aquarium so there isn't really a need for it to be any higher. Should a person have no plants in the aquarium, I would aim for a nitrate level of no more than 5 ppm to keep algae at bay.
My discus is kept in water containing 45+ ppm of nitrate and its growing pretty quickly. It is skittish due to being kept alone rather than it responding to any water parameters in my view.
I think the more a person puts effort into changing any given parameter, the higher the chance the fish will have its immune system compromised. Fish don't like change, whether you are bringing in a new ornament/plant (visible things) or bringing in/removing chemicals.
I would not go as far as changing water chemistry based on an association. I could associate increased use of mouth wash with mouth cancer or associate increased technology usage with obesity but until I establish a cause-effect relationship I would not adapt my actions.
From my experience, hexamita and HITH syndrome may be caused by stress in general which would include a whole range of things like excess c02 injection, unbalanced diet, interspecies aggression etc
Far_King said:If Nitrates are coming out of your tap at 40PPM what are the best ways to lower it?
I always thought around 40 was fine for most tropical species (Discus aside).
Are there recommended additives? Best ways to achieve lower Nitrates without additives if water changes don't work (including RO)? Can other issues be caused?
My discus is kept in water containing 45+ ppm of nitrate and its growing pretty quickly. It is skittish due to being kept alone rather than it responding to any water parameters in my view.
I think the more a person puts effort into changing any given parameter, the higher the chance the fish will have its immune system compromised. Fish don't like change, whether you are bringing in a new ornament/plant (visible things) or bringing in/removing chemicals.
Byron said:He mentioned that hexamita and hole in the head in cichlids are now associated with high nitrate levels, and he agreed that Malawi Bloat may well be due to nitrates, and keeping nitrates below 20 ppm for all cichlids is advisable.
I would not go as far as changing water chemistry based on an association. I could associate increased use of mouth wash with mouth cancer or associate increased technology usage with obesity but until I establish a cause-effect relationship I would not adapt my actions.
From my experience, hexamita and HITH syndrome may be caused by stress in general which would include a whole range of things like excess c02 injection, unbalanced diet, interspecies aggression etc