nitrate question.

kau_cinta_ku

New member
just wondering like with phosphates or copper and some sort they can be absorbed into LR. and in time leak out. was just wondering if the same could be done with nitrates.
 
i have been constantly battling nitrates for 1.5 years sence i have put this rock into my tank from another reefer. how long will it take to leak it all back out or is this a never ending battle?
 
Im not sure if JetCat is completely accurate. While it go deep into the rock, this is also where the anaerobic bacteria the reduce nitrates into nitrogen gass live. As long as this bacteria is around nitrates will not come back out of the rock.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10584565#post10584565 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by rutledgek
Im not sure if JetCat is completely accurate.

Oh i am quiet sure, on many, many occasions I've taken rock out my predator tanks and it took over a year of cooking the rock to get the NO3 levels to zero and stay there between water changes. PO4 levels were about half that time.

and yes it can be all leached back out but the length of time depends on how dense the rock is, water flow, the levels it was kept in previously (concentration of NO3 in the rock now) and how often you do water changes, the lower the ratio of water around the rock to the levels in the rock the quicker it's going to all be drawn out. yes some will be converted to nitrogen gas inside the rock, but it's not 100% efficient, trust me.
 
Other than what's in the pore water inside the rock, no nitrate cannot be leached from the rock. Phosphate can adsorb to the calcium carbonate (though, really not very much). Nitrate does not do that.

cj
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10584704#post10584704 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by MCsaxmaster
Other than what's in the pore water inside the rock, no nitrate cannot be leached from the rock. Phosphate can adsorb to the calcium carbonate (though, really not very much). Nitrate does not do that.

cj

then please explain to us how it is we can place rock that's been in a high NO3 level system into newly made RO/DI salt mix water that has 0 NO3 with a PinPoint monitor and within a few days the NO3 levels are steadily creeping up and continue to do so for some time???

also if you'll check out that little PO4 testing thread i did a few weeks ago you'll see that a good bit of PO4 is held in the rock too and it's heavily leached back out once the surrounding water has lower PO4 levels. and NO, it's not because it was precipitated out with CaCO3, the pH levels are at sufficient levels that any bonded PO4 is held bonded.
 
Sounds like there is decomposition and nitrification happening to me ;)

As I said though, nitrate does not and cannot physically bond to the rock or anything in it. Nitrate does not behave in that way.
 
kinda hard for bare rock to decompose, but hey i ain't no marine biologist like yourself, and I've only been keeping marine tanks since before you were even born so my experience is inferior I'm sure :rolleyes:
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10584781#post10584781 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by MCsaxmaster
Sounds like there is decomposition and nitrification happening to me ;)

As I said though, nitrate does not and cannot physically bond to the rock or anything in it. Nitrate does not behave in that way.

ok on that note how come i can take a rock from my tank. put it in a 10 gal. tank with new saltwater and after 3 monthes and 100% weekly water changes i still get a reading of 40ppm of nitrates using 3 diff. test kits. not that i am doubting anyone but just want to get down to the bottom of my nitrate problems. i am fed up with them.
 
Well, actually bare rock does decompose, though I doubt much of the rock was decomposing ;)

Consider though, was it simply mineral that you added? If the rock was housed in an aquarium as you say, then certainly it was choked full of living things.

Also, I'm not sure why you're taking this personally or getting defensive??? :confused:
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10584856#post10584856 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by kau_cinta_ku
ok on that note how come i can take a rock from my tank. put it in a 10 gal. tank with new saltwater and after 3 monthes and 100% weekly water changes i still get a reading of 40ppm of nitrates using 3 diff. test kits. not that i am doubting anyone but just want to get down to the bottom of my nitrate problems. i am fed up with them.

As I said, there is decomposition and nitrification happening. Nitrate is being produced as organic material is decomposed. It is not in any way bonded to the rock.

cj
 
Can you tell us more about the situation? Nitrate will always be produced, however, it is in very low concentration in nature due primarily to fast rates of assimilation sucking it up. If you have elevated nitrate in a tank you need to increase assimilation and, probably, reduce production.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10584861#post10584861 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by MCsaxmaster
If the rock was housed in an aquarium as you say, then certainly it was choked full of living things.

it was dry base rock added to a predator tank, other then trigger poop and bacteria not much else was on it.
 
Jet

then please explain to us how it is we can place rock that's been in a high NO3 level system into newly made RO/DI salt mix water that has 0 NO3 with a PinPoint monitor and within a few days the NO3 levels are steadily creeping up and continue to do so for some time???

Your RO/DI water killed the bacteria which are decomposing and releasing NO3-. The is one heck of a shift in their osmotic pressure. Not to mention the organics trapped in the rock decaying
 
yeah i know, and it decomposed for over a year too.

Boom

you can't convince me a hundred pound of rock took 100% water changes weekly for over a year to get that little bit of decomposing bacteria out of it. that RO/DI water had 35ppt salt mixed with it you know.
 
Ok? So, detritus is decomposed liberating ammonia. Some of this is processed by nitrifiers produced nitrate....

Again, nitrate was not and cannot be leached from rock as you are suggesting.
 
ok a little about my tank.
75 gal. main tank
30 gal. sump/fuge has cheato and calpera(sp.) but not really growing
90lbs of LR
1.5" sand
mag9.5 return pump.
seio 1100 maxijet mod for water movement
2 phosphate reactors 1 for carbon (changes every 2 weeks) 1 for phosphate remover (changed once a month)
1 filter sock changed every 2 days
asm G2 skimmer (cup and neck changed every 2 weeks)
15 gal. water change every sunday
purelyh2o optima pro rodi filter 0 TDS
for feedings i feed 1 1"x2" sheet of nori and half cube of mysis shrimp per day, switching the mysis to a mix of table shrimp and squid everyother day.

fish
2 - percs male 2" female 3.5"
1 - 4" yellow tang
1 - 1.5" hippo tang
1 - 1.5"pajama cardinal
1 - lawnmower blenny

any other info you needed?
 
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