As of last night I tested ammonia and I was getting a 0ppm result using API. I started at 2.0ppm. I then added ammonia to raise to 2ppm. I will be testing again in a few hours to see if ammonia is present. Assuming it is not then I assume my rock is cycled.We would first factor what you used to be certain it is cycled
But not feed one single thing for a few months, proving the ability of water bacteria seeded into water to get food even if we don't provide it. That's a big deal in reefing
Millions of dollars of things to prevent bacteria starvation are sold to us annually
But I bet it's a lark I bet they don't starve and you could test that. Simply don't feed, and I bet your original cycle close criterion still works in 60 days, or 600 days.
If your cycle can't pass, you toss in one pinch of ground up fish food and wait ten days then it'll pass.
But I bet they won't starve, due to a series of posts by MSteven1 starting page 98 of Dr. Reefs giant bottle bac testing threads.
I was planning on doing a 100% water change tomorrow. My nitrates are at 30ppm tested with Hanna.
Assuming the cycle is complete being verified by 0ppm ammonia, should I still do the water change and then do nothing else?
I'm guessing I would confirm the bacterial population is still intact by raising the ammonia to 2ppm the day before I plan to start up the new system to then see if ammonia is present 24 hours later. Does that sound like the right way to see if the bacteria are still viable?