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Potassium Test Kit



 
 
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  #1  
Old March 11th 05, 07:36 PM
Richard Sexton
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(you're adding phosphate with food, not nitrate)


Nitrate levels will not rise in a tropical fish tank as a direct result
of feeding fish? This seems contradictory to common knowledge.


All fishfood contains phosphates. Fishfood does not contain nitrates;
fish eat the food (or it rots) which produces ammonia which under some
conditions yeilds nitrates.

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  #2  
Old March 11th 05, 09:28 PM
steve
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Richard Sexton wrote:
(you're adding phosphate with food, not nitrate)



Nitrate levels will not rise in a tropical fish tank as a direct

result
of feeding fish? This seems contradictory to common knowledge.


All fishfood contains phosphates. Fishfood does not contain nitrates;
fish eat the food (or it rots) which produces ammonia which under

some
conditions yeilds nitrates.


Is there a high probability that nitrate levels will increase in a fish
tank in direct proportion to increased fish food input after the plants
(if any are present) have consumed the maximum amount of ammonia they
are capable of processing?

What conditions must be present where adding any amount of fish food to
a fish tank would not cause an increase in nitrates? Are these
conditions probable in a common home aquarium?


steve

  #3  
Old March 12th 05, 12:07 AM
Richard Sexton
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Is there a high probability that nitrate levels will increase in a fish
tank in direct proportion to increased fish food input after the plants
(if any are present) have consumed the maximum amount of ammonia they
are capable of processing?


Yes. Almost certainly.

What conditions must be present where adding any amount of fish food to
a fish tank would not cause an increase in nitrates? Are these
conditions probable in a common home aquarium?


Lack of available oxygen will prevent the nitrification cycle
from converting ammonia to nitrate. It happens.


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