Newbie concern

jpontier212

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I just recently posted about high nitrates. I did a 50% water change and my nitrates went from 80ppm to 40ppm. The water change was done on Monday. I tested it today and it had crept up to 60 ppm. No livestock in the aquarium but 5 Mexican turbos and 5 blue legged hermit crabs. I have copepods in my refugium and red and green gracileria in the refugium as well as 6lbs of live rock, Which is turning a beautiful fuscia purple color. Should i be concerned or just continue water changes for another week?
 

saltyphish

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Water changes and patience. If you reading zero ammonia and zero nitrites your cycle is done. The only way to reduce nitrates is by water changes, a fuge, or a couple other means but water changes are the quickest.. I wouild keep doing large water changes 50% or more every couple of days until your nitrates are reading low.
 

McMullen

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+1 to all above posts.
You may have already done this, but if not look up ammonia-nitrite-nitrate cycle. It may give you more insight to what's going on.

You may have noticed frequent post focusing on "nitrates." It can be a confusing topic but in your case the number isn't that important. It would be helpful to know what your ammonia and nitrite levels are. If possible, please post those.
 

TheEngineer

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Water changes and patience. If you reading zero ammonia and zero nitrites your cycle is done. The only way to reduce nitrates is by water changes, a fuge, or a couple other means but water changes are the quickest.. I wouild keep doing large water changes 50% or more every couple of days until your nitrates are reading low.
Don't forget denitrifying bacteria. They convert nitrates into nitrogen gas. The nitrogen cycle is a closed loop :)
 
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jpontier212

jpontier212

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+1 to all above posts.
You may have already done this, but if not look up ammonia-nitrite-nitrate cycle. It may give you more insight to what's going on.

You may have noticed frequent post focusing on "nitrates." It can be a confusing topic but in your case the number isn't that important. It would be helpful to know what your ammonia and nitrite levels are. If possible, please post those.
Parameters as of 3/30
Ammonia 0
Nitrites 0
Nitrate 50 ppm
Salinity 1.027
Temp 78.8°F
Ph 7.9
Haven't tested Cal,Mg, or Kh. Waiting on my test kit in the mail. I don't think those will be important until i get my nitrates under control
 

McMullen

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Looks like your nearing the end of the cycle. Your tank is processing your ammonia. Is there algae in your display for your critters to eat?
 
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jpontier212

jpontier212

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Are you still treating the new water?
I was but i stopped adding Aquaforest Bio s and vodka. I'm trying to see what the tank will do with no help. But i have been adding 2 tsp baking soda diluted for my ph. It's always low. Like at around 7.6 if i don't add baking soda.
 

Lonny

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Your ph is just c02 in the water. The o2 in the water and less c02 the higher the ph. Opening a window in the house or apartment can affect ph. How's the nitrates doing? And don't worry about chasing numbers, your gonna be awesome at this but now is the time just to let things happen. Don't get discouraged.
 
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jpontier212

jpontier212

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Your ph is just c02 in the water. The o2 in the water and less c02 the higher the ph. Opening a window in the house or apartment can affect ph. How's the nitrates doing? And don't worry about chasing numbers, your gonna be awesome at this but now is the time just to let things happen. Don't get discouraged.
Thank you. Nitrates are around 40-50 ppm. I'm doing a 20 gallon water change Sunday. Hopefully i can get my first Anenomes on Monday
 

sirmixa

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I would say the anemone is a gamble. I went through just about the same things you are going through 2 months ago and I went big with this ritteri anemone and he set me back when he died because I rushed it into the unstable water. I'm not saying don't do it, just sharing. I find fish much easier to adjust to the newer tanks

Just my 2 cents
 

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