I'm sitting on my third week of high nitrites during initial cycle. I've done two 50% water changes and they have barely come down. Using API test strips.
Is it possible for a test kit to give a false positive?
I understood that if nitrites went over 5 ppm you could stall the cycle. A water change would be required to bring them below. I assume the bacteria is not free floating and would not be removed with a water change.
A false reading is not only possible, but sounds probable here as water changes should've lowered the levels. Test kits/reagents do go bad and need replaced periodically.
You need to read it a bit closer The 5mg/l figure is in reference to his bacteria blend. While it's true high ammonia and nitrite levels can inhibit (aka slow down) the nitrifying bacteria, it's a bit more complex than that. High ammonia levels inhibit the bacteria that convert nitrite to nitrate, but once the bacteria that convert ammonia to nitrite really kick in and drop the ammonia, the nitrite converting bacteria will kick into action and start converting that nitrite to nitrate...and thus complete the cycle. A little patience and those high levels will come down as the cycle does indeed complete itself despite them. I've dosed systems pretty high, and never had a cycle not complete as expected The one place he does actually talk about stalling the cycle is in reference to low pH. I've always maintained normal pH during cycles, so can't say from experience if that actually happens or not.
Nitrite phases can last a couple of weeks, depending on high they spiked...which directly correlates to how high the ammonia previously spiked. Typically I find a cycle in your classic biofilter type fish tank or aquaculture set up will take a solid 6 to 8 weeks. Reef tank scenario using cured live rock and live sand can take half that time.
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