eaglesaquarium said:
The ammonia is unlikely to be 'pure', it is usually a 9 or 10 per cent solution. If you sniff it and it makes you turn away quickly then it has not 'gone off'. So long as you remove all the water down to the substrate after you have fully cycled and refill with new water you will be fine. Shoudl there be any ammonia 'trapped' in the substrate which eventually gets released it will be disposed of by the filter bacteria. I wouldn't worry, the fact that you are prepared to do a fishless cycle in the first place means you already know more than many, many people when it comes to fish care.
Thanks for the information.
I think after i've concluded the fishless cycle, I'll do several full water changes, disturbing the substrate as much as possible before each water change so as to get trapped nitrogens out. I remember way back when I introduced German Rams to an aquarium which had completed a fishless cycle just 1 day earlier and they would constantly 'flash' when they were near the substrate. If a fish needs to relieve itself from pain either because of parasite attachment or ammonia poisoning it wouldn't exclusively go to the substrate to flash which, for me, gave the game away that it was small amounts of toxins coming out the substrate.
With regards to the ammonia product I can confirm that it does still have a strong smell when you remove the lid so i'll be sure to use it for the fishless cycle
I think you may be misreading the symptom. They flashed on the substrate, because it was coarse enough to "scratch the itch". I've seen bears scratching themselves on trees, but never blamed the tree for being the reason they are scratching on it.
Putting a sensitive fish like GBRs into an immature tank is never a good idea. They are fish that do much better in mature (6+ months) tanks. There's more to the fish keeping hobby that we currently understand. And some fish, like GBRs, discus, etc. often die for unknown reasons in immature tanks.
mark4785 said:
>>Everything in the water, including the water, would interact with the substrate, surely?
I typically have a 1.5 inch deep sand layer, however, segments can get much deeper if I've burrowed an hole(s) when positioning and planting new plants. I will keep the substrate thin so that it is more difficult for food/plants/faeces to get buried.
Silica (sand) is highly unreactive. For this reason it is used to make glass, specifically glassware used in chemistry labs. It is its unreactive properties that make it so attractive for many uses.
I think that the GBR's that die soon after introduction do so because of inappropriate substrates and rocks that are capable of changing the carbonate hardness or general hardness of the water. There's a plant substrate, for instance, that increases the carbonate hardness on the basis that if plants don't get enough C02, they will revert to taking up the constituents that make up carbonate hardness to survive. GBR's require low concentrations of carbonate hardness.
With regards to the itching, yes the sand was course, but it would only flash off of it if it had been disturbed beforehand or if it was swimming close to it. While swimming near the substrate it would stop and contort its body like a snake (the fishes body from front to back would look like an 'S') or would dart from the substrate upwards as though it had been burn't or badly irritated.
None of this behaviour happened towards the upper segments of the tank as though the water was less toxic here. There was plenty of wood, rocks, leaves, glass and filtration body for it to rub itself on at these levels but it seldom did so.
This is just my interpretation really after having observed GBR's over a lengthy period.