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fishless cycling - pH problem?
Hi,
I'm new to this newsgroup, so please redirect me if this question is in the wrong place. I'm trying to cycle my new aquarium using Ammonia. Things seem to be on track except that the pH is climbing to very high levels (pH 8.4 today) and I'm concerned that the bacteria I need for my nitrogen cycle will not do well in these conditions. Details: Small 6 gallon tank L2000 Ladybird AIr Pump GPS 370 filter 2 plants medium well washed gravel + (on day 1) added 2 large handfuls of gravel from an established tank to seed the bacterial populations. Tap water treated with de-chlorinator. Initial water chemistry before start: pH 8.0 (interestingly the tap water here is pH 7.0 - the tank had sat for four days before I began. I don't know where this change came from.) NH3(Ammonia) 0ppm NO2 (Nitrite) 0ppm NO3 (Nitrate) 10ppm Day 1 - added 4 drops ammonia solution (9.5%) (I suspect this is Ammonium Hydroxide which would then give me the OH- ions for alkalinity). NH3 went up to 1.0 ppm Day 2 - added 5 drops ammonia pH 8.3 NH3 2.5ppm NO2 0ppm Day 3 - added 5 drops ammonia pH 8.4 NH3 4ppm NO2 0ppm So, my questions a Is this pH a problem for my fishelss cycle? If so what can I do about it? If not, how can I lower it before adding my fish? Is my main cause of high pH the Hydroxide from the ammonia solution, or something before that (since my tap water is at 7.0 and my initial reading was 8.0)? Any advice, guidance, help would be really appreciated. Cheers, Muddy |
fishless cycling - pH problem?
"muddyfox" wrote in message
oups.com... Hi, I'm new to this newsgroup, so please redirect me if this question is in the wrong place. This is r.a.f.MISC, we do everything ! ;~). I'm trying to cycle my new aquarium using Ammonia. Things seem to be on track except that the pH is climbing to very high levels (pH 8.4 today) and I'm concerned that the bacteria I need for my nitrogen cycle will not do well in these conditions. Details: Small 6 gallon tank L2000 Ladybird AIr Pump GPS 370 filter 2 plants medium well washed gravel + (on day 1) added 2 large handfuls of gravel from an established tank to seed the bacterial populations. Tap water treated with de-chlorinator. Initial water chemistry before start: pH 8.0 (interestingly the tap water here is pH 7.0 - the tank had sat for four days before I began. I don't know where this change came from.) Probably just CO2 outgassing. Pour a glass of water. Check the pH. Let it sit open on a counter and re-test the water in 24 hours. This might answer that question, otherwise, could you have minerals leeching calcium into the water? NH3(Ammonia) 0ppm NO2 (Nitrite) 0ppm NO3 (Nitrate) 10ppm Day 1 - added 4 drops ammonia solution (9.5%) (I suspect this is Ammonium Hydroxide which would then give me the OH- ions for alkalinity). NH3 went up to 1.0 ppm Day 2 - added 5 drops ammonia pH 8.3 NH3 2.5ppm NO2 0ppm Day 3 - added 5 drops ammonia pH 8.4 NH3 4ppm NO2 0ppm So, my questions a Is this pH a problem for my fishelss cycle? I don't think so. The nitrifying bacteria actually prefer alkaline conditions. If so what can I do about it? If not, how can I lower it before adding my fish? Tsk tsk, don't mess with the pH. Remove causes of influence, otherwise I'd leave it alone. Is my main cause of high pH the Hydroxide from the ammonia solution, or something before that (since my tap water is at 7.0 and my initial reading was 8.0)? Any advice, guidance, help would be really appreciated. Cheers, Muddy That's all the advice I have. Wait for the NO2 and so on. -- www.NetMax.tk |
fishless cycling - pH problem?
"muddyfox" wrote in message
oups.com... Hi, I'm new to this newsgroup, so please redirect me if this question is in the wrong place. I'm trying to cycle my new aquarium using Ammonia. Things seem to be on track except that the pH is climbing to very high levels (pH 8.4 today) and I'm concerned that the bacteria I need for my nitrogen cycle will not do well in these conditions. Details: Small 6 gallon tank L2000 Ladybird AIr Pump GPS 370 filter 2 plants medium well washed gravel + (on day 1) added 2 large handfuls of gravel from an established tank to seed the bacterial populations. Tap water treated with de-chlorinator. Initial water chemistry before start: pH 8.0 (interestingly the tap water here is pH 7.0 - the tank had sat for four days before I began. I don't know where this change came from.) NH3(Ammonia) 0ppm NO2 (Nitrite) 0ppm NO3 (Nitrate) 10ppm You're already cycled here! Day 1 - added 4 drops ammonia solution (9.5%) (I suspect this is Ammonium Hydroxide which would then give me the OH- ions for alkalinity). NH3 went up to 1.0 ppm If you use ammonia, you should only use pure ammonia. Any grocery store should carry it. Day 2 - added 5 drops ammonia pH 8.3 NH3 2.5ppm NO2 0ppm What's happening with the Nitrate? And, your ammonia is rising because you're adding ammonia to an *already cycled tank*! STOP IT! Day 3 - added 5 drops ammonia pH 8.4 NH3 4ppm NO2 0ppm So, my questions a Is this pH a problem for my fishelss cycle? If so what can I do about it? If not, how can I lower it before adding my fish? Is my main cause of high pH the Hydroxide from the ammonia solution, or something before that (since my tap water is at 7.0 and my initial reading was 8.0)? Any advice, guidance, help would be really appreciated. Cheers, Muddy I'm not sure why you're adding ammonia to a small tank that has been seeded from another tank. Since I fishless cycled my first tank, I've never had to cycle another - just used gravel, plants, decorations, filter media, whatever, to seed the new tank. Perhaps the high pH is coming from your ammonia "solution". As noted earlier, you should be using only pure ammonia. Meanwhile, why don't you stop adding ammonia (of any kind) to an apparently already cycled tank?? Gail |
fishless cycling - pH problem?
"Gail Futoran" wrote in message
... "muddyfox" wrote in message oups.com... Hi, I'm new to this newsgroup, so please redirect me if this question is in the wrong place. I'm trying to cycle my new aquarium using Ammonia. Things seem to be on track except that the pH is climbing to very high levels (pH 8.4 today) and I'm concerned that the bacteria I need for my nitrogen cycle will not do well in these conditions. Details: Small 6 gallon tank L2000 Ladybird AIr Pump GPS 370 filter 2 plants medium well washed gravel + (on day 1) added 2 large handfuls of gravel from an established tank to seed the bacterial populations. Tap water treated with de-chlorinator. Initial water chemistry before start: pH 8.0 (interestingly the tap water here is pH 7.0 - the tank had sat for four days before I began. I don't know where this change came from.) NH3(Ammonia) 0ppm NO2 (Nitrite) 0ppm NO3 (Nitrate) 10ppm You're already cycled here! I suspect that it is tap water NO3 which has been measured... Day 1 - added 4 drops ammonia solution (9.5%) (I suspect this is Ammonium Hydroxide which would then give me the OH- ions for alkalinity). NH3 went up to 1.0 ppm If you use ammonia, you should only use pure ammonia. Any grocery store should carry it. Day 2 - added 5 drops ammonia pH 8.3 NH3 2.5ppm NO2 0ppm What's happening with the Nitrate? .... or else the NH3 And, your ammonia is rising because you're adding ammonia to an *already cycled tank*! STOP IT! Day 3 - added 5 drops ammonia pH 8.4 NH3 4ppm NO2 0ppm ....would be NO2 (eventually) So, my questions a Is this pH a problem for my fishelss cycle? If so what can I do about it? If not, how can I lower it before adding my fish? Is my main cause of high pH the Hydroxide from the ammonia solution, or something before that (since my tap water is at 7.0 and my initial reading was 8.0)? Any advice, guidance, help would be really appreciated. Cheers, Muddy I'm not sure why you're adding ammonia to a small tank that has been seeded from another tank. Since I fishless cycled my first tank, I've never had to cycle another - just used gravel, plants, decorations, filter media, whatever, to seed the new tank. Perhaps the high pH is coming from your ammonia "solution". As noted earlier, you should be using only pure ammonia. Meanwhile, why don't you stop adding ammonia (of any kind) to an apparently already cycled tank?? Do you agree, Gail? -- www.NetMax.tk Gail |
fishless cycling - pH problem?
Did you check your gravel? They may increase your PH level. In fact,
you should check any deco in your tank to make sure they do not react to acid. Otherwise, they will increase your PH level. Also, tab water in most case increase PH level after air out the CO2 in a day or two. My tap water comes out at 7.5, 24 hours later it goes to 8.0, In day two, it goes up to 8.3. A simple way to test this is to have two plastic cups, one filled with tab water, one with 1/2 gravel and 1/2 tap water. Test both right after fill, then in 6 hours, then in 24 hours, then in 48 hours. Recording down all readings. That will give you a better picture how's the water in your area, also how it react to your gravel. Let use know in two days then we can help you. Hi, I'm new to this newsgroup, so please redirect me if this question is in the wrong place. I'm trying to cycle my new aquarium using Ammonia. Things seem to be on track except that the pH is climbing to very high levels (pH 8.4 today) and I'm concerned that the bacteria I need for my nitrogen cycle will not do well in these conditions. Details: Small 6 gallon tank L2000 Ladybird AIr Pump GPS 370 filter 2 plants medium well washed gravel + (on day 1) added 2 large handfuls of gravel from an established tank to seed the bacterial populations. Tap water treated with de-chlorinator. Initial water chemistry before start: pH 8.0 (interestingly the tap water here is pH 7.0 - the tank had sat for four days before I began. I don't know where this change came from.) NH3(Ammonia) 0ppm NO2 (Nitrite) 0ppm NO3 (Nitrate) 10ppm Day 1 - added 4 drops ammonia solution (9.5%) (I suspect this is Ammonium Hydroxide which would then give me the OH- ions for alkalinity). NH3 went up to 1.0 ppm Day 2 - added 5 drops ammonia pH 8.3 NH3 2.5ppm NO2 0ppm Day 3 - added 5 drops ammonia pH 8.4 NH3 4ppm NO2 0ppm So, my questions a Is this pH a problem for my fishelss cycle? If so what can I do about it? If not, how can I lower it before adding my fish? Is my main cause of high pH the Hydroxide from the ammonia solution, or something before that (since my tap water is at 7.0 and my initial reading was 8.0)? Any advice, guidance, help would be really appreciated. Cheers, Muddy |
fishless cycling - pH problem?
Thusly "muddyfox" Spake Unto All:
I'm trying to cycle my new aquarium using Ammonia. Things seem to be on track except that the pH is climbing to very high levels (pH 8.4 today) and I'm concerned that the bacteria I need for my nitrogen cycle will not do well in these conditions. Ammonia has a pH of about 10-11 so it's not all that surprising that adding pure ammonia causes pH to rise. pH 8.3 is also the equilibrium point for hard water, so if your water has high KH that's the pH you're going to have when the CO2 in the water is in equilibrium with the CO2 of the atmosphere. That said, a pH of 8.4 wont inconvenience your de/nitrifying bacteria in the slightest. You don't want the pH to go over 9.5, though. I see others have suggested the rising pH may be due to limestone-containing sediment in your tank, but that'll not be the case - one can't raise the pH of a tank to 8.3 with limestone. I wish one could, but the equilibrium point will be in the region of 7.5-7.7, because the limestone dissolves so slowly. Also, like others have noted, your tank is already cycled, as ammonia & nitrite is zero, and nitrate is 30 ppm. On a sidenote, using pure ammonia isn't really necessary, one can also simply feed the tank sparingly (without any fish being in it). The food will rot & provide ammonium for the de/nitrifying bacteria. I don't know why so many seem to prefer to use ammonia; possibly it seems cleaner & more controlled. |
fishless cycling - pH problem?
Hi Gail,
Thanks for your post. Sadly I don't think my tank is cycled :( , although I can see why it looks that way with NH3 at zero, NO2 at zero and NO3 at 10ppm at the start. As NetMax said - it's the tap water. I wasn't sure myself so I tested it and it's bang on 10ppm straight from the tap - same as the tank. I didn't realise, though, that I didn't have to do a cycle if I seed the tank from an established one. As you can see I'm a bit new to this. I shall probably continue now I've started but will bear your advice in mind for next time. Many thanks! |
fishless cycling - pH problem?
Hi,
I think you're rigth about the tap water - I tested it and it's just the same as the tank. Thanks! |
fishless cycling - pH problem?
Thanks NetMax - that's really useful info. I will wait. I spoke to my
local fish shop and they see the same thing with the tap water around here. Their pH starts at around 7.0 and goes up to just over 8 after a few days. CO2 outgassing makes sense as the reason too. I will follow your advice about not messing with the pH, apart from a 50% water change at the end of the cycle to get rid of excess NO3. Cheers! |
fishless cycling - pH problem?
Hi fish lover,
Interesting about the gravel - it would never have occurred to me. I gave it a thorough wash and popped it in. I will do the test you suggest and post the results in a couple of days. Thanks! |
fishless cycling - pH problem?
Mean_Chlorine wrote: Thusly "muddyfox" Spake Unto All: I'm trying to cycle my new aquarium using Ammonia. Things seem to be on track except that the pH is climbing to very high levels (pH 8.4 today) and I'm concerned that the bacteria I need for my nitrogen cycle will not do well in these conditions. Ammonia has a pH of about 10-11 so it's not all that surprising that adding pure ammonia causes pH to rise. pH 8.3 is also the equilibrium point for hard water, so if your water has high KH that's the pH you're going to have when the CO2 in the water is in equilibrium with the CO2 of the atmosphere. Yes the water is very hard around here and 8.3 is about where the tanks are at my local fish shop so that all fits perfectly. That said, a pH of 8.4 wont inconvenience your de/nitrifying bacteria in the slightest. You don't want the pH to go over 9.5, though. That's a real relief to know. I will keep an eye on it though, to check it doesn't go up to 9.5. I see others have suggested the rising pH may be due to limestone-containing sediment in your tank, but that'll not be the case - one can't raise the pH of a tank to 8.3 with limestone. I wish one could, but the equilibrium point will be in the region of 7.5-7.7, because the limestone dissolves so slowly. Also, like others have noted, your tank is already cycled, as ammonia & nitrite is zero, and nitrate is 30 ppm. Unfortunately the nitrate I have comes directly from the tap water rather than a completed cycle, in fact I think it's just over the level which is regarded as safe in drinking water so I have reported it to the water quality dept in our local water company. On a sidenote, using pure ammonia isn't really necessary, one can also simply feed the tank sparingly (without any fish being in it). The food will rot & provide ammonium for the de/nitrifying bacteria. I don't know why so many seem to prefer to use ammonia; possibly it seems cleaner & more controlled. Well I wanted to do it this way originally because it seemed more natural and I wouldn't then have to muck about with ammonia but three things put me off. One was that someone said (somewhere on the internet) that this can give artificially high levels of phosphate which, apparently, is bad. Another was that I didn't really know how much food to give or what to give. (Some folk put lumps of raw fish in the tank, others high protien solid food and others flake. Finally, people seemed to say different things about cleaning the tank, some said syphon off the food every day, some said leave it all there and other folk said everything else in between! I couldn't get a clear protocol so I went for the ammonia in the end. You sound very experienced. I would still prefer to use fish food so if you have a clear way of doing this I'd love to hear it. Many, many thanks for your very helpful advice and insight, Muddy |
fishless cycling - pH problem?
"NetMax" wrote in message
.. . "Gail Futoran" wrote in message ... "muddyfox" wrote in message oups.com... Hi, I'm new to this newsgroup, so please redirect me if this question is in the wrong place. I'm trying to cycle my new aquarium using Ammonia. Things seem to be on track except that the pH is climbing to very high levels (pH 8.4 today) and I'm concerned that the bacteria I need for my nitrogen cycle will not do well in these conditions. Details: Small 6 gallon tank L2000 Ladybird AIr Pump GPS 370 filter 2 plants medium well washed gravel + (on day 1) added 2 large handfuls of gravel from an established tank to seed the bacterial populations. Tap water treated with de-chlorinator. Initial water chemistry before start: pH 8.0 (interestingly the tap water here is pH 7.0 - the tank had sat for four days before I began. I don't know where this change came from.) NH3(Ammonia) 0ppm NO2 (Nitrite) 0ppm NO3 (Nitrate) 10ppm You're already cycled here! I suspect that it is tap water NO3 which has been measured... Day 1 - added 4 drops ammonia solution (9.5%) (I suspect this is Ammonium Hydroxide which would then give me the OH- ions for alkalinity). NH3 went up to 1.0 ppm If you use ammonia, you should only use pure ammonia. Any grocery store should carry it. Day 2 - added 5 drops ammonia pH 8.3 NH3 2.5ppm NO2 0ppm What's happening with the Nitrate? ... or else the NH3 And, your ammonia is rising because you're adding ammonia to an *already cycled tank*! STOP IT! Day 3 - added 5 drops ammonia pH 8.4 NH3 4ppm NO2 0ppm ...would be NO2 (eventually) So, my questions a Is this pH a problem for my fishelss cycle? If so what can I do about it? If not, how can I lower it before adding my fish? Is my main cause of high pH the Hydroxide from the ammonia solution, or something before that (since my tap water is at 7.0 and my initial reading was 8.0)? Any advice, guidance, help would be really appreciated. Cheers, Muddy I'm not sure why you're adding ammonia to a small tank that has been seeded from another tank. Since I fishless cycled my first tank, I've never had to cycle another - just used gravel, plants, decorations, filter media, whatever, to seed the new tank. Perhaps the high pH is coming from your ammonia "solution". As noted earlier, you should be using only pure ammonia. Meanwhile, why don't you stop adding ammonia (of any kind) to an apparently already cycled tank?? Do you agree, Gail? -- www.NetMax.tk Gail I still have some questions but reading the rest of the thread I believe the OP now has things under control. That said, I defer to your judgment, NetMax. :) Gail |
fishless cycling - pH problem?
Hi All,
Thanks very much for all your messages. You've really helped me out. The pH fell back to 8.3 tonight and the tank began to cycle - Nitrite at 0.50 ppm!!! Really appreciate all your help, Cheers, Muddy |
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