Tank fishless cycling

rockstarta78

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Hello all

So I started cycling my tank day after Christmas. My NO2 was stuck at 2ppm forever. Tonight my readings are as follows (picture posted)

pH: 8.0
NH3/NH4: 0 ppm
NO2: 0 ppm
NO3: 40 ppm

My question is can I safely say my tank is cycled? Do I need to do a water change? Should I put more ammonia to bring it up to 3ppm? Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks
 
You do not need to add any more ammonia, it will only make your high nitrate issue worse. You do not give your tank size, but I would make a substantial water change, at least 50% but I would make it 100% to bring down the nitrates. After than add a small clean up crew, and easy to care for corals and fish slowly once they clear quarantine.
 
You do not need to add any more ammonia, it will only make your high nitrate issue worse. You do not give your tank size, but I would make a substantial water change, at least 50% but I would make it 100% to bring down the nitrates. After than add a small clean up crew, and easy to care for corals and fish slowly once they clear quarantine.
Sorry forgot the tank size. It's a 40g breeder tank.
 
You do not need to add any more ammonia, it will only make your high nitrate issue worse. You do not give your tank size, but I would make a substantial water change, at least 50% but I would make it 100% to bring down the nitrates. After than add a small clean up crew, and easy to care for corals and fish slowly once they clear quarantine.

For CuC, I would need to feed them for now right? Since there's no leftover food.
 
So, yes I would make a 100% water change and add the clean up crew (start small and add to it as the need increases). You could feed the tank a very small pinch of dry flake or pellet fish food to feed the CUC, but there is likely going to be algae soon with your elevated nitrates even if you make the big water change, so I would add the CUC.
 
So, yes I would make a 100% water change and add the clean up crew (start small and add to it as the need increases). You could feed the tank a very small pinch of dry flake or pellet fish food to feed the CUC, but there is likely going to be algae soon with your elevated nitrates even if you make the big water change, so I would add the CUC.
Right now I have no algae. You think I'd get an algae outbreak even after the water change?
 
Right now I have no algae. You think I'd get an algae outbreak even after the water change?

Some algae is almost a guarantee in a new tank, and since your rock is sitting in a lot of nitrate right now it would be unlikely that you will not get at least some fairly soon even after the water change. It's nothing to panic about, algae and diatoms are a natural part of your tank maturing.
 
Some algae is almost a guarantee in a new tank, and since your rock is sitting in a lot of nitrate right now it would be unlikely that you will not get at least some fairly soon even after the water change. It's nothing to panic about, algae and diatoms are a natural part of your tank maturing.
I used BRS reef saver rock. Also used Dr. Tim's nitrifyng bacteria. Just so I could avoid new tank syndrome. Guess I better do a 100% water change asap. It's part midnight or I'd do it right now. Lol
 
So it looks like my NO2 takes over 24 hours to get down to 0ppm after I added Ammonia to see how fast the nitrifyng bacteria work. Is that normal?
 
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