mcozad829
Premium Member
yeah i just wanted to know the difference from curing and cycling lol
semantics and purpose, lol that is the short answer
yeah i just wanted to know the difference from curing and cycling lol
Regardless of the rock, they won't process nitrate. The more pouress ( sp? ), the better as it will allow more surface area for bacteria to colonize.
yes but the bacteria on the live rock lowers nitrates if the bioload is less than its capacity doesn't it?
Yes. Nitrate reduction requires only that there be a suitable low oxygen area for the bacteria to grow on. They will develop in your aquarium naturally assuming you have hypoxic/anoxic conditions in rock/sand bed. Shallow sand beds work fine.
It's true that nitrate to N2 reduction by bacteria is typically very slow and usually doesn't keep up with bioload. It gets complicated because other organisms in an aquarium can and do take up nitrate, for example micro and macro algae, coralline algae, some corals, etc.
Stingeragent is a bit confused here, vodka/vinegar/biopellet dosing simply provides food (carbon) for existing bacteria. It doesn't add any specific bacteria to your system, and actually is very unlikely to affect any anaerobes.
The nitrogen cycle sure doesn't end at nitrate..if it did we'd all be in big trouble here on Earth.![]()
hope that helps a bit
ivy
Yes. Nitrate reduction requires only that there be a suitable low oxygen area for the bacteria to grow on. They will develop in your aquarium naturally assuming you have hypoxic/anoxic conditions in rock/sand bed. Shallow sand beds work fine.
It's true that nitrate to N2 reduction by bacteria is typically very slow and usually doesn't keep up with bioload. It gets complicated because other organisms in an aquarium can and do take up nitrate, for example micro and macro algae, coralline algae, some corals, etc.
Stingeragent is a bit confused here, vodka/vinegar/biopellet dosing simply provides food (carbon) for existing bacteria. It doesn't add any specific bacteria to your system, and actually is very unlikely to affect any anaerobes.
The nitrogen cycle sure doesn't end at nitrate..if it did we'd all be in big trouble here on Earth.![]()
hope that helps a bit
ivy
so that's why vodka/vinegar/biopellets clears nitrates because they provide food for other bacteria to eat nitrates?
so after nitrates dissipates from nitrogen gas off anaerobic filtration that's not the end of the nitrogen cycle?
Think of it in the scope of a "new to the hobby thread", for all intensive purposes in regards to aquarium use the nitrate cycle ends at nitrates... Anything beyond would fall into the advanced category and carbon dosing which is extensively covered in the more advanced forums. Throwing too much at a new reefer at once will do nothing but lead to confusion.