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Raised Nitrite
My filter recently lost power for a day or two before I discovered it.
Ammonia levels were up and I lost 2 fish. I rinsed and cleaned the filter extreely well just using tank water (it was quite smelly) Whne I was finished it had that normal musty type of odour. i reassemable the filter and started it up. I was assuming that I would be starting from scratch again as all the bacterioa must have died. So I added zeolite and with water changes the ammonia became undetectable. I then deciede that now was a good time to strip down the whole tank for a clean. I refilled the tank with tap water and aquaplus to remove chlorine and let this run with the filter for 24 hours before adding the fish. I acclimatized the fish in their temp tanks by plenty of small water changes with water from the "clean" tank setup. I then transfered just the fish back to the tank. I never measured for ammonia and nitrite becuase I would be expecting 0. I kept the zeolite (which I realise would retard the re cycling, but I did not want to stress the fish out with raised ammonmia levels). After checking the water a couple of days later I found zero ammonia (the zeolite doing its work I assume) and raised nitrite(0,3 ppm) I checked the tap water to be sure there were no nitrtrites. I would not have expected nitrities so soon - unless the filter is actually working to convert some ammonia into nitritite, but the filter can clearly not handle all the nitrities. Does this sound normal? Trev |
"Trevor" wrote in message
e.com... My filter recently lost power for a day or two before I discovered it. Ammonia levels were up and I lost 2 fish. I rinsed and cleaned the filter extreely well just using tank water (it was quite smelly) Whne I was finished it had that normal musty type of odour. i reassemable the filter and started it up. I was assuming that I would be starting from scratch again as all the bacterioa must have died. So I added zeolite and with water changes the ammonia became undetectable. I then deciede that now was a good time to strip down the whole tank for a clean. I refilled the tank with tap water and aquaplus to remove chlorine and let this run with the filter for 24 hours before adding the fish. I acclimatized the fish in their temp tanks by plenty of small water changes with water from the "clean" tank setup. I then transfered just the fish back to the tank. I never measured for ammonia and nitrite becuase I would be expecting 0. I kept the zeolite (which I realise would retard the re cycling, but I did not want to stress the fish out with raised ammonmia levels). After checking the water a couple of days later I found zero ammonia (the zeolite doing its work I assume) and raised nitrite(0,3 ppm) I checked the tap water to be sure there were no nitrtrites. I would not have expected nitrities so soon - unless the filter is actually working to convert some ammonia into nitritite, but the filter can clearly not handle all the nitrities. Does this sound normal? Trev Yup. Measuring zero ammonia does not mean there is zero, only that you're below the threshold of the kit. Existing nitrifying bacteria which are coating everything inside the tank will be competing with your zeolite for the ammonia, so you're now seeing NO2. Sounds ok imo, and I agree that it will take a while to build the bacteria stock levels back up (and for them to move back into your sterile filter media). -- www.NetMax.tk |
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