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Correct - eventually something is likely going to consume the ammonia. But if that is not the traditional nitrifying pathways (they have no food due to the damage at the top of their food chain), then all bets are off as to the timing and what other heterotrophic (or even autotrophic) bacteria expand to do the job. Bacteria need food too!There are at least some reports that different levels of ammonia promote different bacterial genus/types, whatever. The "stall" has been described as the crossover point from the boom and bust of one genus, to the prevalence of another genus/type (I'm definitely not a biologist). Due to the slow reproduction rates of true nitrifiers this crossover point looks like a "stall", according to reports.
Your point is actually logically sound.
Tank is started and a pile of heterotrophs and ammonia are poured in. The heterotrophs start consuming the ammonia, driving it down -- but are also ravishing the organic carbon as they go. At some point they run out of carbon before ammonia. Because the traditional nitrifiers never had a chance to take a foothold, the "cycle" stall due to carbon limitation -- or as Dr. Reef said, even lack of oxygen.
So in short - a hetfertropic bloom was created and it consumed what it could, ran out of food and collapsed before the nitrifies could rise and populate. They can't now because there is no food, just raw ammonia. Given time, the cycle will likely complete on its own. The needed food might come from the now dying precursor bacteria, or just organic matter settling over time.
@Lasse you may want to hop on in here and give the ol' Swedish twerk and screw :beaming-face-with-smiling-eyes:

