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brandon429

why did you put a reef in that
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Two shrimp are known to degrade into high nitrate, your full problem has been solved. Regarding algae or no algae, you can search out on this site high nitrate no algae tanks, and low nitrate high algae tanks. It ranges tank to tank. if you were to search any info outside this thread you will see high nitrate isn’t harmful to fish or bacteria, your tank never had any issues this entire time. Merely a nitrate reading from meat you put into the tank designed to break down into nitrate.
 
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SaltwaterWorld1780

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Two shrimp are known to degrade into high nitrate, your full problem has been solved. Regarding algae or no algae, you can search out on this site high nitrate no algae tanks, and low nitrate high algae tanks. It ranges tank to tank. if you were to search any info outside this thread you will see high nitrate isn’t harmful to fish or bacteria, your tank never had any issues this entire time. Merely a nitrate reading from meat you put into the tank designed to break down into nitrate.
Even two small shrimp in a 200 gallon system for only 24 hours would raise that much nitrates?
 

brandon429

why did you put a reef in that
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Yes, problem solved. We have proven the existence of bacteria in more ways than one, from many angles. I doubt another thread has measured them in as many ways: known submersion times, lots of shrimp decay, live rock, directly inputted nitrifying bacteria, no extended free ammonia, measured endpoint nitrogen cycle=nitrate, and any bioload inputted will live.

Your thread isn’t an emergency thread. It’s a thread about basic nitrate questions. Search out: Randy Holmes Farley, nitrate in the reef aquarium. It covers all future concerns about the variability of nitrate and if it has impacts on being present in a cycled reef tank.

Take time to read that and it will shape future discussion and planning for nitrate
 
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SaltwaterWorld1780

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Yes, problem solved. We have proven the existence of bacteria in more ways than one, from many angles. I doubt another thread has measured them in as many ways: known submersion times, lots of shrimp decay, live rock, directly inputted nitrifying bacteria, no extended free ammonia, measured endpoint nitrogen cycle=nitrate, and any bioload inputted will live.

Your thread isn’t an emergency thread. It’s a thread about basic nitrate questions. Search out: Randy Holmes Farley, nitrate in the reef aquarium. It covers all future concerns about the variability of nitrate and if it has impacts on being present in a cycled reef tank.

Take time to read that and it will shape future discussion and planning for nitrate
Ol thanks, the only reason I put emergency is that I have 2 sailfin tangs, one Naso tang 2 clown fish, one coral beauty and a snowflake eel in a smaller tank, and I know they are getting finicky.
 

brandon429

why did you put a reef in that
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That’s quite the bioload of nice fish it’s good research and prep
 

Stuck to your aquarium: Do you put reef-related stickers on or around your reef system?

  • I have reef-related stickers everywhere!

    Votes: 5 2.9%
  • I have some reef-related stickers on or around my reef system.

    Votes: 51 29.1%
  • I have some reef-related stickers, but not on my reef system.

    Votes: 37 21.1%
  • I don’t have reef-related stickers, but I am interested in getting some.

    Votes: 20 11.4%
  • I have no interest in reef-related stickers.

    Votes: 60 34.3%
  • Other.

    Votes: 2 1.1%
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