Question about my nitrate

zachary1124

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Hello everyone, after doing a water test I was gonna start doing a reef but I started to notice after two or three months my nitrates been at the same level and has never went up. Should I be worried about this before I start to put coral into my tank
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Looks like your tank has been running for sometime and has fish, so it is cycled. I think it just runs low on nitrate, which is not uncommon. I tend to follow the guidelines from Randy Holmes-Farley on where to keep your levels, including nitrate:

From the above:
"4. What targets seem reasonable? Of course, that depends on all the other factors at play, such as types of corals, availability of ammonia, particulate foods, etc. However, for a mature mixed reef, this would be how I personally would run it:
  • Let nitrate float between 5 ppm and 50 ppm. I’d use gentle export in this range, such as growing macroalgae.
  • Above 50 ppm, I’d begin to focus more on reducing it, by organic carbon dosing, turf or macroalgae, etc.
  • Below 5 ppm, I’d begin to dose ammonia or feed more. The target level might drop lower if dosing ammonia, just like the heavy in/heavy out scenario where nitrate may not be as needed.
  • Let phosphate float between about 0.06 ppm and 0.3 ppm. This range is higher than I’ve recommended in the past. I’d use gentle export in this range, such as growing macroalgae.
  • Above about 0.3 ppm, I’d begin to focus more on reducing it, by turf or macroalgae, or a binder such as GFO or lanthanum (has its own risks to tangs). If a binder: GO SLOW. Turf and macroalgae will typically be slow enough.
  • Below 0.06 ppm, I’d begin to dose sodium phosphate or feed more to get the level up."
So in your case you can first try feeding the fish more and see if that brings up the nitrate, and if it's still chronically low you can dose nitrate or even better dose ammonia:

It would probably be a good idea to check your phosphate too, you don't want either phosphate or nitrate to zero out 🙂

I hope that helps and good luck!
 

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