Reducing Nitrates

omerseymen

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Hi guys. I have been checking my nitrates for 2 weeks but it has been the same as 50*.
How can i reduce the nitrate in my aquarium?

Are De-Nitrators worth to buy? (for example SeaChem- Denitrate) And should i buy a media reactor to use a denitrator?
 

WalkerLoves_TheOcean

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I would stay away from chemicals.

You have a few options;
- get a skimmer if you don't have one already
- get macroalgae
- do a large water change
- find the cause of the high nitrates and fix it (overstocked tank, over feeding, is the tank properly cycled, ETC)
 
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nachurch

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Still very new to the hobby but I was told putting carbon in a bag in the back of the tank helps to reduce the nitrates as well! Is this true or not so much??
 
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crazyfishmom

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Still very new to the hobby but I was told putting carbon in a bag in the back of the tank helps to reduce the nitrates as well! Is this true or not so much??
Not all that much. Carbon dosing helps with nitrates but with such high levels it is unlikely to help much. As other posters have said, large water changes and then carbon dosing to keep under control would be my recommendation.
 
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WalkerLoves_TheOcean

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Still very new to the hobby but I was told putting carbon in a bag in the back of the tank helps to reduce the nitrates as well! Is this true or not so much??
Not activated carbon, which is sold in the bags. Dosing carbon helps, but it more risky and not necessarily the most efficient.
 
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nachurch

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Not all that much. Carbon dosing helps with nitrates but with such high levels it is unlikely to help much. As other posters have said, large water changes and then carbon dosing to keep under control would be my recommendation.
Thanks for the info dude!! I only have a 10G tank right now so a good 1G change every couple weeks seems to keep everything running smooth
 
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crazyfishmom

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Thanks for the info dude!! I only have a 10G tank right now so a good 1G change every couple weeks seems to keep everything running smooth
If your nitrates are at 50, a 1 gallon water change every couple of weeks is unlikely to make a big dent. I would recommend to do 3 gallon water changes every other day for 3-4 changes which will get you down to the 10-15 which is a good healthy range and then you should be able to monitor and maintain where you want them.
 
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Rjukan

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If your nitrates are at 50, a 1 gallon water change every couple of weeks is unlikely to make a big dent. I would recommend to do 3 gallon water changes every other day for 3-4 changes which will get you down to the 10-15 which is a good healthy range and then you should be able to monitor and maintain where you want them.
That was a hijack lol.. the OP has 50 nitrate.
 
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tzabor10

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What is your rock and sand situation? My nitrates are always at 3ppm. I’ve attributed it to my deep sand bed and plenty of rocks
 
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omerseymen

omerseymen

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Thanks a lot guys, so i am going to make a water change. And i want to ask is changing 40 liters of my 200 liter tank enough? Or should it be more than 40 Liters
 
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WalkerLoves_TheOcean

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Thanks a lot guys, so i am going to make a water change. And i want to ask is changing 40 liters of my 200 liter tank enough? Or should it be more than 40 Liters
A water change will definitely help, but to get the nitrates all the way down, you should need to do a 100% water change. To get them down to 25ppm, you would need to do a 50% water change. This is why water changes aren't the best.
 
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Randy Holmes-Farley

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Hi guys. I have been checking my nitrates for 2 weeks but it has been the same as 50*.
How can i reduce the nitrate in my aquarium?

Are De-Nitrators worth to buy? (for example SeaChem- Denitrate) And should i buy a media reactor to use a denitrator?

I discuss and compare the many ways of reducing nitrate here. They all have different pros and cons.

 
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