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I'm going to be moving 2 YoYo loaches, 3
Cory cats, 2-3 Glowlight Tetras & several otocinclus from a 20G long to a 55G. Both are moderately planted. Plants are easy care such as crypts, Java Fern, maybe a sword or two, & some floating plants. The 55G has been set up for about a month. Since I moved plants, driftwood, and decor from the 20G, the 55G is already cycled. I.e., ammonia is zero, nitrites are zero, nitrates are present but low. Filtration is a power filter and a powerhead. At the moment, both are running without filter material. Question is when to move the fish. Right now the pH, GH & KH levels in both tanks are close in value. Nitrates, though, are high in the 20G (where fish currently live), around 30-40 PPM. Nitrates in the 55G are /=5 PPM. I just did a partial water change (4 gal. extracted) on the 20G and will retest nitrates. I suspect I will continue doing small water changes for a few days to get nitrates lower. From my readings it's suggested fish shouldn't experience sudden changes in water parameters, even from "dirty" to "clean". The gravel in the 20G is three years old and I doubt I can get it *very* clean without yanking out some large plants with extensive root systems. BTW I don't do CO2 injection. My plants do fine without it. Can anyone suggest a target nitrate value for the 20G that will make it safe for me to move the fish to a much cleaner (in nitrate terms) environment in the 55G? I.e., is a value around 20 PPM nitrates in the 20G reasonable, or should I try to get nitrates lower? In the 5-10 range? Thanks - Gail |
#2
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![]() "Gail Futoran" wrote in message ... I'm going to be moving 2 YoYo loaches, 3 Cory cats, 2-3 Glowlight Tetras & several otocinclus from a 20G long to a 55G. Both are moderately planted. Plants are easy care such as crypts, Java Fern, maybe a sword or two, & some floating plants. The 55G has been set up for about a month. Since I moved plants, driftwood, and decor from the 20G, the 55G is already cycled. I.e., ammonia is zero, nitrites are zero, nitrates are present but low. Filtration is a power filter and a powerhead. At the moment, both are running without filter material. Question is when to move the fish. Right now the pH, GH & KH levels in both tanks are close in value. Nitrates, though, are high in the 20G (where fish currently live), around 30-40 PPM. Nitrates in the 55G are /=5 PPM. I just did a partial water change (4 gal. extracted) on the 20G and will retest nitrates. I suspect I will continue doing small water changes for a few days to get nitrates lower. From my readings it's suggested fish shouldn't experience sudden changes in water parameters, even from "dirty" to "clean". The gravel in the 20G is three years old and I doubt I can get it *very* clean without yanking out some large plants with extensive root systems. BTW I don't do CO2 injection. My plants do fine without it. Can anyone suggest a target nitrate value for the 20G that will make it safe for me to move the fish to a much cleaner (in nitrate terms) environment in the 55G? I.e., is a value around 20 PPM nitrates in the 20G reasonable, or should I try to get nitrates lower? In the 5-10 range? Thanks - Gail ============================== PH and hardness was the only thing I ever concerned myself about when moving fish. I never bothered to check the nitrate levels.... no problems so far. |
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On Tue, 08 Apr 2008 19:52:19 +0000, Gail Futoran wrote:
The 55G has been set up for about a month. Since I moved plants, driftwood, and decor from the 20G, the 55G is already cycled. I.e., ammonia is zero, nitrites are zero, nitrates are present but low. Unless you've been adding ammonia, or there are fish already in the tank, I don't see how it could be considered cycled. More likely the bacteria that were present on the plants/driftwood/decor have died off from lack of nourishment. If you did have fish in the tank, ignore my concerns. If not, swap in some filter material from the 20G and feed a teaspoon or so a day of ammonia for a week. Then move one or two fish over and see how the tank chemistry goes. |
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On Apr 8, 2:52*pm, "Gail Futoran"
wrote: I'm going to be moving 2 YoYo loaches, 3 Cory cats, 2-3 Glowlight Tetras & several otocinclus from a 20G long to a 55G. *Both are moderately planted. *Plants are easy care such as crypts, Java Fern, maybe a sword or two, & some floating plants. The 55G has been set up for about a month. Since I moved plants, driftwood, and decor from the 20G, the 55G is already cycled. I.e., ammonia is zero, nitrites are zero, nitrates are present but low. *Filtration is a power filter and a powerhead. *At the moment, both are running without filter material. Question is when to move the fish. *Right now the pH, GH & KH levels in both tanks are close in value. *Nitrates, though, are high in the 20G (where fish currently live), around 30-40 PPM. *Nitrates in the 55G are /=5 PPM. I just did a partial water change (4 gal. extracted) on the 20G and will retest nitrates. *I suspect I will continue doing small water changes for a few days to get nitrates lower. From my readings it's suggested fish shouldn't experience sudden changes in water parameters, even from "dirty" to "clean". *The gravel in the 20G is three years old and I doubt I can get it *very* clean without yanking out some large plants with extensive root systems. *BTW I don't do CO2 injection. *My plants do fine without it. Can anyone suggest a target nitrate value for the 20G that will make it safe for me to move the fish to a much cleaner (in nitrate terms) environment in the 55G? I.e., is a value around 20 PPM nitrates in the 20G reasonable, or should I try to get nitrates lower? *In the 5-10 range? Thanks - Gail I would not worry about matching nitrates. To be honest either my tanks are balaced out the same or I am just plain lucky as all I ever check for anymore is to get the temps close and thats it. As long as yuor sure your tank is now cycled, then just do a temperature acclimation matchup. I think they would do just fine. Perhaps just move a cou0le of fish at a time over, so as not to overload what ever bio system is in place........sort of how they add sal****er fish only do one or two at a time..so system can adjust to bio load. I like to try and get my nitrates as low as possible but plants do neet it to grow, and once again its been years on end since I have done any serious water testing, and everything does great so far like it is. I do however use co2 sysyem on the heavily planted tanks as there is not sufficient bioload to do the polants much good without it. Hard to pass it up for what I got it for....Close out at Petsmart and it was like 75% off suggested list, and refills were selling for 1 cent a pack regular price was like $12.99 a pack....................so maybe it would not hurt to checkout Petsmart for the Hydro brand co2 system....... The cory cats and glow light tet are pretty hardy, and I also have to believe the clown loachs will do fine too........I also find Oto's pretty darn hardy as well......so I think you will be just fine without worrying with nitrate etc matchup. even 10-20 ppm of nitrate is not going to hurt the fish in a heavily planted tank...but I wuod shoot for the 10 ppm range myself "IF" I was one to do water tests. Swap the media from the established tank to be on the safe side and give it 5 to 7 days or just do the couple of fish at a time over a week or two time span with old filter media in place and it should be ok. |
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"Larry Blanchard" wrote in message
news ![]() On Tue, 08 Apr 2008 19:52:19 +0000, Gail Futoran wrote: The 55G has been set up for about a month. Since I moved plants, driftwood, and decor from the 20G, the 55G is already cycled. I.e., ammonia is zero, nitrites are zero, nitrates are present but low. Unless you've been adding ammonia, or there are fish already in the tank, I don't see how it could be considered cycled. More likely the bacteria that were present on the plants/driftwood/decor have died off from lack of nourishment. If you did have fish in the tank, ignore my concerns. If not, swap in some filter material from the 20G and feed a teaspoon or so a day of ammonia for a week. Then move one or two fish over and see how the tank chemistry goes. I haven't had to cycle a tank since I got my first one set up. I currently have four active (plants + fish) tanks. If you know what you're doing - minimally, I'm no expert - there's no need to do a new cycle. As long as one has an active tank and plants, gravel, decor, etc. to move into a new tank, there is no need for a cycle period. http://faq.thekrib.com/begin-cycling.html#speed-cycling To clarify, I will emphasize that in addition to planting plants in the substrate, and moving over driftwood colonized by Java Fern, I have a bunch of floating plants (duckweed, anacharis, hornwort). All help keep the tank cycled. (They get fed with substrate food - plant tabs - and Flourish Excel.) As stated in my original email, the 55G was set up about one month ago. Starting about a week ago when I tested the water I got ammonia = zero, nitrites = zero, nitrates = 5 - 10, pH = 7.2 - 7.4. That is a *cycled* tank. My only question was to what extent I should attempt to match nitrates from the source tank (20G - nitrates about 30 PPM) to the target tank (55G - nitrates about 7 PPM). All other water parameters, including temperature, are close. I'm inclined to continue daily small partial water changes to the source (20G) tank until the nitrates get closer to 20 than where they are now, before gradually moving fish to the 55G. Thanks to all who responded. Gail |
#6
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![]() "Tynk" wrote in message ... On Apr 8, 10:35�pm, Larry Blanchard wrote: On Tue, 08 Apr 2008 19:52:19 +0000, Gail Futoran wrote: The 55G has been set up for about a month. Since I moved plants, driftwood, and decor from the 20G, the 55G is already cycled. I.e., ammonia is zero, nitrites are zero, nitrates are present but low. Unless you've been adding ammonia, or there are fish already in the tank, I don't see how it could be considered cycled. �More likely the bacteria that were present on the plants/driftwood/decor have died off from lack of nourishment. If you did have fish in the tank, ignore my concerns. �If not, swap in some filter material from the 20G and feed a teaspoon or so a day of ammonia for a week. �Then move one or two fish over and see how the tank chemistry goes. I too was wondering about the tank running with live bacteria that was moved into the tank, but nothing to feed it for a month. When I read his post I assumed he cycled it with fish of some kind. ??? How long exactly does the bacteria live without a food source? I've had LavaRock dry out in the 720g tank filter spring back to life in less than a week. I believe it doesn't necessarily "die" but goes dormant until wet and in the presence of ammonia or nitrites. brevity snips I would also bump up the water changes on the 20 while those remaing fish wait for the 55 to cycle (if no ammonia source was available for the month wait). This is exactly what I would do. By the time I moved them the water parameter would be about the same. But I never concerned myself with Nitrates. -- RM.... ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
#7
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"Reel McKoi" wrote in message
... "Tynk" wrote in message ... On Apr 8, 10:35�pm, Larry Blanchard wrote: On Tue, 08 Apr 2008 19:52:19 +0000, Gail Futoran wrote: The 55G has been set up for about a month. Since I moved plants, driftwood, and decor from the 20G, the 55G is already cycled. I.e., ammonia is zero, nitrites are zero, nitrates are present but low. Unless you've been adding ammonia, or there are fish already in the tank, I don't see how it could be considered cycled. �More likely the bacteria that were present on the plants/driftwood/decor have died off from lack of nourishment. If you did have fish in the tank, ignore my concerns. �If not, swap in some filter material from the 20G and feed a teaspoon or so a day of ammonia for a week. �Then move one or two fish over and see how the tank chemistry goes. I too was wondering about the tank running with live bacteria that was moved into the tank, but nothing to feed it for a month. When I read his post I assumed he cycled it with fish of some kind. ??? How long exactly does the bacteria live without a food source? I've had LavaRock dry out in the 720g tank filter spring back to life in less than a week. I believe it doesn't necessarily "die" but goes dormant until wet and in the presence of ammonia or nitrites. brevity snips I would also bump up the water changes on the 20 while those remaing fish wait for the 55 to cycle (if no ammonia source was available for the month wait). This is exactly what I would do. By the time I moved them the water parameter would be about the same. But I never concerned myself with Nitrates. -- RM.... ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö Obviously I expressed myself poorly in some respects in my original post. My new 55G tank has been "running" - in that it has had gravel, water, water movement (via a power filter & a powerhead), decor and some quantity of plants taken from active tanks - for a month, but until I got close to thinking about starting to add fish, I didn't even bother testing the water. The plants were doing fine with root tabs & Flourish Excel, so I saw no need to do testing until about __a week ago__. At that point nitrates were present, ammonia & nitrites were absent. The very definition of a cycled tank. Thus it has been each day that I have tested. My only concern and the only reason I posted here was the level of nitrates in my source tank vs the level of nitrates in my target tank. I've made my decision about that so I no longer look for a response on that question. I hope that clarify matters. Again, thanks for the responses. Gail [----female, not male] |
#8
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![]() "Gail Futoran" wrote in message ... Obviously I expressed myself poorly in some respects in my original post. My new 55G tank has been "running" - in that it has had gravel, water, water movement (via a power filter & a powerhead), decor and some quantity of plants taken from active tanks - for a month, but until I got close to thinking about starting to add fish, I didn't even bother testing the water. The plants were doing fine with root tabs & Flourish Excel, so I saw no need to do testing until about __a week ago__. At that point nitrates were present, ammonia & nitrites were absent. The very definition of a cycled tank. Thus it has been each day that I have tested. The nitrates may have come from the RootTabs. Where else would it come from if no fish are in the tank? My only concern and the only reason I posted here was the level of nitrates in my source tank vs the level of nitrates in my target tank. I've made my decision about that so I no longer look for a response on that question. I hope that clarify matters. Again, thanks for the responses. Gail [----female, not male] |
#9
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"Reel McKoi" wrote in message
... "Gail Futoran" wrote in message ... Obviously I expressed myself poorly in some respects in my original post. My new 55G tank has been "running" - in that it has had gravel, water, water movement (via a power filter & a powerhead), decor and some quantity of plants taken from active tanks - for a month, but until I got close to thinking about starting to add fish, I didn't even bother testing the water. The plants were doing fine with root tabs & Flourish Excel, so I saw no need to do testing until about __a week ago__. At that point nitrates were present, ammonia & nitrites were absent. The very definition of a cycled tank. Thus it has been each day that I have tested. The nitrates may have come from the RootTabs. Where else would it come from if no fish are in the tank? The plants I moved over from the source tank. The decor I moved over from the source tank. The WATER I moved over from the source tank. And maybe the root tabs contributed. I don't care how it happened, I just know it happened. Yesterday I found four fry in the new tank. They are undoubtedly from the Glowlight Tetras in the source tank. Now let's ask how fry could possibly hatch from eggs and then survive in a tank that wasn't cycled... Or let's not. BTW that's the first time I've seen fry in any of my tanks. Eggs, sure. The Cory cats lay them rather frequently, although none hatch that I've noticed. So I must be doing something right with my new tank. Adult fish are now in the new tank. Nitrates are present but low, ammonia is zero, nitrites are zero, yadda yadda. Gail |
#10
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There are a number of articles and comments
in forums that refer to using living plants to help cycle a new tank. To set up my new 55G, I relied heavily on Chuck Gadd's article: http://www.csd.net/~cgadd/aqua/art_plant_newtank.htm I departed from his steps in two ways: 1) I don't do CO2 injection. Instead I used daily doses of Flourish Excel. And I didn't exactly overdose the tank, but I did use larger doses than recommended on occasion. My plants are low light, easy care plants, nothing that absolutely requires CO2 injection. 2) I didn't add fish until most of my plants were in place and the tank had been running for almost a month, and I didn't start with only algae eaters. In the first batch of fish I added one Oto plus three Cory cats and two Glowlight tetras (plus the four teensy fry that came into the new tank on some plants). The second batch of fish, added a day later included two Neon tetras and two more Cory cats. I still have more stem plants to add, but then I'll be able to remove some of the floaters to keep them from blocking light to the lower levels. I.e., the plant biomass will stay approximately the same. I haven't seen any algae in the tank that I didn't bring in from an existing tank (i.e., several Java Fern leaves have some algae on them), and there has been no bacterial bloom, but then yesterday was only my second day of adding fish. I'll wait a week and monitor water parameters daily before adding more fish. I'm aware that cycling is a controversial topic, but the system I used based on Chuck Gadd's article appeared to work just fine. I used a very similar method several years ago when setting up a new 20G Long tank, with no problems - and it has the heaviest plant growth of all my tanks. In doing research for this post, I learned a new term: "silent cycling", which is what some people are using to refer to cycling with plants. I think I've exhausted anything I have to say on this subject. I'm going to enjoy my new 55G and its plants, driftwood and fish. Gail |
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