Nitrates too high??

Ab129

Member
Over the last couple months I've noticed green algae growing on my rocks. During this time I have also observed my nitrates rising from around 10 ppm to over 20 ppm.
I do 15% wc s every week.
The only conclusion I can come up with is that maybe I am overfeeding?
I have 6 fish
2 oscellaris clowns
2 wrasses
Royal gramma basslet
Valentini puffer
I feed one time per day and I alternate between one frozen cube of food or about a 1/2 inch square of reef frenzy which I chop up with a razor blade.
Should I cut back on the food or is there a better way of reducing my nitrates?
I would like to start adding coral but want to lower my nitrates first.
 
Once a day is plenty if not overfeeding a small bit. I have gone to every other day feeding and all my fish are still fat and happy. The only difference is I see them picking at the rocks more now, and they don't look like homeless people begging for feed every time I get near the tank.



Carbon dosing and more WC's are about the only ways I know to effectively get rid of high nitrates.


EDIT:
I have 7 fish in an 80 cube. 2 midnight clowns, starry blenny, yellow eye kole, flameback angel, yellow coris wrasse, warpaint goby, and green mandarin.
 
How old is the tank?
For a fish only or soft coral tank those nitrate levels are not a problem..
It can help fuel nuisance algae growth and can be an issue for more demanding corals though..

If your nitrates are rising then input > output..plain and simple..
That might just be because the tank is newer and doesn't have a suitable bacterial population to take care of itself or because you are overfeeding slightly..

As stated carbon dosing is a good way to help with that if you don't want to increase water changes or decrease feeding..
All it takes is dropping some vinegar into the tank daily..
 
Tank cycled one year ago. First fish added last December.
Adding vinegar sounds easy! What are the drawbacks?
Where can I read up on that?
 
hmm.... we change r 2 r to clay-boa now? Never typed clay-boa.


Kind of funny we censor that site, yet they do not censor this sites name in their forums. Afterall we are just reef junkies trying to get a fix or info for that fix.
 
hmm.... we change r 2 r to clay-boa now? Never typed clay-boa.

Kind of funny we censor that site, yet they do not censor this sites name in their forums. Afterall we are just reef junkies trying to get a fix or info for that fix.

That site has been "censored" for a long time now here..
The reefkeeping link/article is all one needs.. Just follow chart and enjoy...

**my thoughts on the matter have been self-censored here to protect the innocent and weak-willed*** :D
 
Yes you can use Vinegar or Vodka or a combination of both..
From what I've seen/calculated,etc.. Vinegar seems to be less costly and there seems to be some evidence that you are less likely to have cyano problems from using Vinegar vs Vodka.. So pick up a $3/gallon distilled white vinegar bottle at the grocery store and start adding some to the tank each day and see how it goes..
Except a couple weeks to start to see results..

If you start to see clear bacterial "snot" in the tank back the dosage down and maintain it at that level..
 
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