@Brandon4 @Azedenkae Thank you
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Just like ammonia, nitrite can be toxic and harmful to marine animals even at lower levels
It is my personal belief that nitrite has very little impact in saltwater vs freshwater
I will check it out. So if I do a big water change, 25-30 gal, before the new tank arrives, and save that water by using a powerhead and heater if needed (my house keeps brutes at 80 degrees in the summer), then I can use this water to help fill the new tank as well as all the new I'll have to make upConnecting Established Reef To New Tank
EDIT: In conclusion, if using the method I did - connecting an established reef to a new system with dry rock (clean), I recommend the following: 1. Dose your new tank prior to connecting to your old tank with NO3 and PO4 enough to raise to your established tank levels. 2. Take your skimmer...www.reef2reef.com
check that example out of going from cured rocks to dry. we use that post to show how we can cycle tanks free by merely running reef water from another tank over dry rocks...no nitrite used notice. ammonia control proven
Yeah that's fair enough for peace of mind. ^_^Sounds like I have a good plan in place! Will I add bottle bac? Probably lol's. But at least now I have confidence that this will go smoothly.
The hallmark impact of waiting for nitrite compliance means no projected start date. open-ended wait. it also implies that the only test kit we have for the param in the hobby, API, is automatically right this time
NOT toxicJust curious - Are you saying nitrITE IS toxic in saltwater or IS NOT toxic in saltwater? Top quote makes me think your saying it is but then bottom kind of says it isnt.
I think it was an article by Randy Holmes-Farley that explained about NitrITE not being toxic in the saltwater environment unless recorded at extrmeely high values.
Just curious, whilst reading the thread.
Waiting out is the biggest misconception, and thinking of those who have waited 6 or more weeks to add anythingYou know what I think makes an important proof for claims: take any tuned seneye post that tracks out a brand new tank cycling with fish and bottle bac, zero wait. They all go in at once.
that seneye shows total control day 1 to day 200 for ammonia, nitrite was never factored. search 'em lemme know if we see different results. In other words a zero wait time is optional, and ethical, so why wait a month or two / we paid for the quick start? by waiting out two months, we didnt even need any bottle bac or feed the systems will self-cycle free of charge.
dont get skunked by paying for bottle bac, then waiting out the timeframe for an unassisted cycle. its completely counterproductive.
From a fish perspective, unless you have a very large number of fish, what you are planning should be fine. For coral, this move may not go so well.Can I move the coral rocks into the new tank immediately upon set up as I need to add them to the new rockscape? Do I need to dose with the ammonia stuff? Can I do that with corals in the tank? (all softies: zoas, palys, rhodactis, gsp, hairy mushrooms) How long before I can move the fish over, or some of the fish. I want to be able to take that tank down reasonably fast.
Nitrite IS toxic to all fish. The chlorides in salt water provide protection for the fish and keep the fish from absorbing it. For nitrite in water to harm fish the nitrite has to be high enough, or chlorides low enough, to allow a harmful level to be taken up by the fish.Just curious - Are you saying nitrITE IS toxic in saltwater or IS NOT toxic in saltwater? Top quote makes me think your saying it is but then bottom kind of says it isnt.
I think it was an article by Randy Holmes-Farley that explained about NitrITE not being toxic in the saltwater environment unless recorded at extrmeely high values.
Just curious, whilst reading the thread.
I guess harmful would have been a better choice of word then i reckon - I get its toxic - But is it harmful to fish in the saltwater environment, ie the everyday expected environment we keep the fish in.Nitrite IS toxic to all fish. The chlorides in salt water provide protection for the fish and keep the fish from absorbing it. For nitrite in water to harm fish the nitrite has to be high enough, or chlorides low enough, to allow a harmful level to be taken up by the fish.
I don't worry about nitrite from a fish health perspective but I do recommend using a test kit during cycling. A large number of people have done unnecessary (imo) water changes to lower nitrates when their nitrates were never high to begin with. A relatively small amount of nitrite will cause a false high nitrate reading.I guess harmful would have been a better choice of word then i reckon - I get its toxic - But is it harmful to fish in the saltwater environment, ie the everyday expected environment we keep the fish in.
Ive always assumed it isnt myself and articles like Randy's also seem to suggest in normal, everyday circumstances that nitrITE is not really worth worrying about in our tanks.
I dont actually think ive ever owned a nitrITE test kit to be honest, right or wrong, in quite a long time in the hobby.
I don't trust any test kit data without challenge. I consider alkalinity and calcium to be critical to know accurately. I use 3 separate test kits/systems and have a lab certified reference solution to verify them with. Since I consider nitrite to be non critical, I don't bother with or necessarily care about accuracy. I only use it as a data point if I question my nitrate reading. I do keep 2 nitrate kits. If I show low nitrates on both kits then I know a high nitrite reading is not possible and must be a testing error.Brew what's your take on the hobby accepting all api nitrite data as accurate, without challenge
try and find one reported nitrite reading where anyone simply asks for validation proof of the reading, 100% acceptance as fact rate even here as I read back a few pages.
is there any chance that kit, or its preps, or its reporting levels can be misconstrued by thousands? its fill levels are still 5 mls/folks misfill daily and still report postive readings
wait time before recording the outcome
contamination by Prime use/amquel
shaking reagents correctly
all these are known issues in the other api kits
until we get side by side sample comparison threads it seems we're making the ends fit the means we have with zero proofing required?
when someone reports api nitrite to you, Ive never seen accuracy verified or requested?