Is there a particular reference he used? May be easier to find.
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And I wonder why............. I have heard - but I can´t verify it with 100 working threads - that living rock may content nitrifying bacteria......Waiting for nitrite compliance as 90% of all dry cyclers do still required further disease control and prevention methods.
Do you have nitrite measurements to prove that statementfollowed the classic approach of waiting for full zero nitrite.
Now you come with false statement - as I know - very few report their nitrite levels - they report their total ammonia concentrations and they often show a false result of 0.25 ppm. Do not report apples when you count pears.But if I could have a penny for every time they did it because api showed .25, I'd rather take that cut
The first thing they are going to ask is; are there similar studies already published? When I answer yes (see above) then my application would be denied.
Certainly controlled studies can be helpful - that's where I got the data from that shows nitrite is non-toxic to marine fish under real world conditions.
Not when it involves killing animals - then you need to demonstrate the probable results outweigh the cost to the animals in terms of mortality. The job of an IACUC is to regulate that use. You just can’t go in front of them and say you want to test toxic limits of some compound when there are already many references that show this data.That's counterproductive. Science is not science without repeatable, independently verifiable results. Findings from a single study or organization should always be taken with a grain of salt, without exception.
That is exactly my point! All of the toxic nitrite scenarios came from spiked samples, NOT real world cases (much lower levels, even during the worst case cycling). Since we aren’t spiking our tanks with sodium nitrite, we don’t have to worry about it from natural sources, the concentration is below the level that has any effect on marine fish.I'm a bit confused by that statement. It would be hard to find high nitrites under real world conditions aside from a partially cycled aquarium. Did you mean to say under lab conditions?
Totally agree Dr. Z!!I wouldn't say it is not toxic. Even if acute or lethal it is still toxic. Found a few places for example that listed 96 hr, and 24 hr Lc50's. Which 50% of test subjects died within that time frame. Most are similar from 5 to upwards of 3000mg/L where 50% are dead in that time. That is marine fish. The safer ranges from less than .5mg/L to 15 mg/L for inverts and less than 5mg/L to 50mg/L fish in one article. Safer though still toxic. I have seen on here some that let it go to over 10mg/L. Saying one would never get to toxic levels is just false. Temperature matters cold water species are much more sensitive. To add when the temperature rises the toxicity increases to nearly double in most at usual aquarium temperatures because the fish need to take in more oxygen. It is also another unknown in common kept fish whether some fish take more nitrite via their stomach than through gills. Which would negate the effects chloride has on making nitrite absorption rates into body safer. Not to mention other variables or chemical reactions that increase toxicity as well as side effects caused even if they did not die. Some of the places I found only listed a few commonly kept fish and inverts. None were very comprehensive lists. Realistically would one want to risk a several hundred dollar fish to a possible 50% chance of survival right out of the gate without solid data? Even risk a 15% chance on top of all the other probabilities? Whether it be interfering with biological functions, increased susceptibility to disease/parasites or outright death. I would be a lot more convinced if anyone can find me Lc2's (2%) or lowest observed adverse effect levels/concentration. I would like the greatest chance of survival, long life, and good health for my pets. Until then I will personally test and control nitrite when cycling new or dealing with die off cycles.
A power out causing funny things, a dead fish, snail, clam etc that isn't found for a day or two, over stocking a few new fish, overfeeding, a disease outbreak, a cycle problem with fish, or algae die off. Sometimes causing high levels persisting a few days. Sometimes all of the above happen and more than once in a reef keepers tank time. Not a real world situation? Yes I agree that it would never get to lc50 test levels in available documents that lack tons of fish people here keep. If you did read clownfish, rabbitfish research papers you see gill damage, and other effects that may not be reversible at test levels that do happen sometimes for a few days. Also each day if its not addressed it becomes more and more toxic in either test. Say 10% damage after 3 days then a while down the road 10% more damage, and as many times as it might happen. Then you have 35% gill damage X years later at what point does this not hurt or without our knowing kill the fish? That is only an example for a fish with middle of the road sensitivity. What about other fish like an angelfish, anthia, eel or anything that is not as middle of the road sensitive. Call me crazy but I would not subject a 500$ angelfish to this or a 10 $ chromis. Spiking the level to 10mg in a lab test with sodium nitrite does compare to a natural source because in water sodium nitrite dissociates. In marine aquarium dominant most reactive cation is sodium so you would naturally have sodium and nitrite floating around. Also aside from toxicology studies of just nitrite what about the other chemical biproducts from organic reactions? Some of which are way more toxic and more persistent what are they doing? Back to post 1 this is exactly why I personally will test and remediate if necessary just saying I want best health for my pets. (not a cycling argument, trying to sell anyone on a test kit, or method) Sorry if I am repeating my self a lot but I would mainly just like to point out that by definition a toxic substance is one that causes damages. Some you see here in solid proof at occurring levels so that is a real world situation, and sodium nitrite is natural. What is your definition of toxicity why is it so different from how I am interpreting this? Just trying to understand your perspective.That is exactly my point! All of the toxic nitrite scenarios came from spiked samples, NOT real world cases (much lower levels, even during the worst case cycling). Since we aren’t spiking our tanks with sodium nitrite, we don’t have to worry about it from natural sources, the concentration is below the level that has any effect on marine fish.
Jay
IME - a normal concentration in many aquarium there I have measure it is around 0.0 - 0-0.04. Not any toxic levels but it high enough to interference with nitrate measurements.IME nitrites are one of those things that only exist in any measurable amount for a brief period during cycling and if you blink,
A power out causing funny things, a dead fish, snail, clam etc that isn't found for a day or two, over stocking a few new fish, overfeeding, a disease outbreak, a cycle problem with fish, or algae die off. Sometimes causing high levels persisting a few days. Sometimes all of the above happen and more than once in a reef keepers tank time. Not a real world situation? Yes I agree that it would never get to lc50 test levels in available documents that lack tons of fish people here keep. If you did read clownfish, rabbitfish research papers you see gill damage, and other effects that may not be reversible at test levels that do happen sometimes for a few days. Also each day if its not addressed it becomes more and more toxic in either test. Say 10% damage after 3 days then a while down the road 10% more damage, and as many times as it might happen. Then you have 35% gill damage X years later at what point does this not hurt or without our knowing kill the fish? That is only an example for a fish with middle of the road sensitivity. What about other fish like an angelfish, anthia, eel or anything that is not as middle of the road sensitive. Call me crazy but I would not subject a 500$ angelfish to this or a 10 $ chromis. Spiking the level to 10mg in a lab test with sodium nitrite does compare to a natural source because in water sodium nitrite dissociates. In marine aquarium dominant most reactive cation is sodium so you would naturally have sodium and nitrite floating around. Also aside from toxicology studies of just nitrite what about the other chemical biproducts from organic reactions? Some of which are way more toxic and more persistent what are they doing? Back to post 1 this is exactly why I personally will test and remediate if necessary just saying I want best health for my pets. (not a cycling argument, trying to sell anyone on a test kit, or method) Sorry if I am repeating my self a lot but I would mainly just like to point out that by definition a toxic substance is one that causes damages. Some you see here in solid proof at occurring levels so that is a real world situation, and sodium nitrite is natural. What is your definition of toxicity why is it so different from how I am interpreting this? Just trying to understand your perspective.