Best way to raise Nitrates

saturn13

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 2, 2019
Messages
322
Reaction score
351
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Hey everyone,

So my understanding is that nitrates should be higher than phospahtes, and both of mine are really low, nitrates undetecabke to the eye with salifert kit, or high doing low range conversion around 2ppm. phos at 0.04 ppm dosed by Neophos. should I bring up my nitrates at all with Neonitro?

Thanks
 

piranhaman00

2500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
Jun 24, 2019
Messages
4,879
Reaction score
4,831
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
2ppm NO3 and 0.04ppm PO4 is pretty great for SPS! You could always bring your nitrate up. People have success at 5-25ppm. PO4, 0.01-0.5ppm.
 

Miller535

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 11, 2019
Messages
2,203
Reaction score
1,936
Location
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Hey everyone,

So my understanding is that nitrates should be higher than phospahtes, and both of mine are really low, nitrates undetecabke to the eye with salifert kit, or high doing low range conversion around 2ppm. phos at 0.04 ppm dosed by Neophos. should I bring up my nitrates at all with Neonitro?

Thanks

I used neo nitro and it worked great. Many will tell you just feed more, but the problem with that is that you are not just added nitrate with food, but a bunch of other organics. Dose the neo nitro, start low, and test the next day.
 

ScottB

7500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 5, 2018
Messages
7,884
Reaction score
12,164
Location
Fairfield County, CT
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Hey everyone,

So my understanding is that nitrates should be higher than phospahtes, and both of mine are really low, nitrates undetecabke to the eye with salifert kit, or high doing low range conversion around 2ppm. phos at 0.04 ppm dosed by Neophos. should I bring up my nitrates at all with Neonitro?

Thanks
Couple questions:
a) How old is the tank?
b) Do you have any algae (film or hair or turf)?
c) Are you trying to correct a "problem" like cyano or anything?

If the system is less than a year old I wouldn't dose. Just add some fish. Or feed more often.
If you have any algae, then you have sufficient NO3.

Your PO4 level is fine. At some point your rock will saturate with PO4 and you won't have to dose often or at all.

Take care when dosing NO3 to a "cleanish" tank. There is a strong tendency for that to lower PO4 in a nitrate limited system. I would hold off until your able to keep measurable PO4 without dosing. Or at a minimum keep a close eye on PO4.
 

Miller535

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 11, 2019
Messages
2,203
Reaction score
1,936
Location
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Couple questions:
a) How old is the tank?
b) Do you have any algae (film or hair or turf)?
c) Are you trying to correct a "problem" like cyano or anything?

If the system is less than a year old I wouldn't dose. Just add some fish. Or feed more often.
If you have any algae, then you have sufficient NO3.

Your PO4 level is fine. At some point your rock will saturate with PO4 and you won't have to dose often or at all.

Take care when dosing NO3 to a "cleanish" tank. There is a strong tendency for that to lower PO4 in a nitrate limited system. I would hold off until your able to keep measurable PO4 without dosing. Or at a minimum keep a close eye on PO4.

That is a good point. I have not cycled a tank in probably 7 years where I used live rock which had die off and had NO3 and PO4 from the start. I forget sometimes how clean these new dry rock tanks are.
 
OP
OP
saturn13

saturn13

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 2, 2019
Messages
322
Reaction score
351
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Couple questions:
a) How old is the tank?
b) Do you have any algae (film or hair or turf)?
c) Are you trying to correct a "problem" like cyano or anything?

If the system is less than a year old I wouldn't dose. Just add some fish. Or feed more often.
If you have any algae, then you have sufficient NO3.

Your PO4 level is fine. At some point your rock will saturate with PO4 and you won't have to dose often or at all.

Take care when dosing NO3 to a "cleanish" tank. There is a strong tendency for that to lower PO4 in a nitrate limited system. I would hold off until your able to keep measurable PO4 without dosing. Or at a minimum keep a close eye on PO4.
Over a year. It's a frag tank, onky a couple firefish. No alage, I'm running a alage scrubber and the growth there isn't really much. no correction other than trying to get more growth.
 

ScottB

7500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 5, 2018
Messages
7,884
Reaction score
12,164
Location
Fairfield County, CT
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Hey everyone,

So my understanding is that nitrates should be higher than phospahtes, and both of mine are really low, nitrates undetecabke to the eye with salifert kit, or high doing low range conversion around 2ppm. phos at 0.04 ppm dosed by Neophos. should I bring up my nitrates at all with Neonitro?

Thanks
BTW, for low range NO3 measuring, the best test kit IME is NYOS. Much easier to read for low range.
 

Miller535

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 11, 2019
Messages
2,203
Reaction score
1,936
Location
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Over a year. It's a frag tank, onky a couple firefish. No alage, I'm running a alage scrubber and the growth there isn't really much. no correction other than trying to get more growth.

I wouldn't run a scrubber on a tank with that little bio load, and with such low nutrients.
 

ScottB

7500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 5, 2018
Messages
7,884
Reaction score
12,164
Location
Fairfield County, CT
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Over a year. It's a frag tank, onky a couple firefish. No alage, I'm running a alage scrubber and the growth there isn't really much. no correction other than trying to get more growth.
Got it.

Algae scrubbers are very effective at maintaining a "heavy in / heavy out" system. I run my frag system this way to pretty good effect. But I have almost three pounds of fish in there, grazing and pooping all day.

Do you have the size to support some tangs or large fish?
 
OP
OP
saturn13

saturn13

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 2, 2019
Messages
322
Reaction score
351
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Got it.

Algae scrubbers are very effective at maintaining a "heavy in / heavy out" system. I run my frag system this way to pretty good effect. But I have almost three pounds of fish in there, grazing and pooping all day.

Do you have the size to support some tangs or large fish?
its only a 45 gallon deep blue
 

Lasse

10K Club member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 20, 2016
Messages
10,884
Reaction score
29,886
Location
Källarliden 14 D Bohus, Sweden
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
The problem with the advise - feed more when you are satisfied with one of the major nutrients is that you will raise that too. If you want to go the "feed more way" - use Nori in order to rise NO3 and Reef Roids for rising PO4. I do not know what Neonitro is - I use NaNO3 or Chile saltpetre from the spice shelf of my grocery store (40 g NaNO3 in 500 ml of water as stock solution. 1 ml of this in 100 L of water rise the NO3 with around 0.5 ppm - not exactly but around that.)

Sincerely Lasse
 

ScottB

7500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 5, 2018
Messages
7,884
Reaction score
12,164
Location
Fairfield County, CT
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
its only a 45 gallon deep blue
Even if it is a frag layout, that is a tad small for any tangs other than a juvenile tomini. The Tang Police be giving you noise even with that. But there are many other good "working" fish to choose from though that bring other benefits besides usable nutrient.
 
OP
OP
saturn13

saturn13

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 2, 2019
Messages
322
Reaction score
351
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
The problem with the advise - feed more when you are satisfied with one of the major nutrients is that you will raise that too. If you want to go the "feed more way" - use Nori in order to rise NO3 and Reef Roids for rising PO4. I do not know what Neonitro is - I use NaNO3 or Chile saltpetre from the spice shelf of my grocery store (40 g NaNO3 in 500 ml of water as stock solution. 1 ml of this in 100 L of water rise the NO3 with around 0.5 ppm - not exactly but around that.)

Sincerely Lasse
Not sure what Nori is
 

ReefLab

Well-Known Member
View Badges
Joined
Aug 28, 2019
Messages
710
Reaction score
781
Location
Las Vegas
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
0.04 PO4 and 2ppm NO3 is great IMO. as long as they don't get to zero.
How do your corals look?
you can make a potassium nitrate and potassium phosphate solution to dose when you need to. Cheapest and easiest way to do it since you can make the solutions such that 1mL=0.1ppm in your tank or whatever you want.
 

Hallowhead

2500 Club Member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 27, 2019
Messages
2,936
Reaction score
1,422
Location
New Jersey
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I've been dosing both stump crap for nitrates and trisodium phosphate for a long time now. It's very hard for me to register anything.

This is attributed to dinos... But they're almost wiped out. I'm nervous one day I'm gonna have so saturated rock that my phosphates are gonna kill everything.
 

High pressure shells: Do you look for signs of stress in the invertebrates in your reef tank?

  • I regularly look for signs of invertebrate stress in my reef tank.

    Votes: 35 31.5%
  • I occasionally look for signs of invertebrate stress in my reef tank.

    Votes: 26 23.4%
  • I rarely look for signs of invertebrate stress in my reef tank.

    Votes: 21 18.9%
  • I never look for signs of invertebrate stress in my reef tank.

    Votes: 29 26.1%
  • Other.

    Votes: 0 0.0%
Back
Top