Reef Central Online Community

Go Back   Reef Central Online Community > General Interest Forums > The Reef Chemistry Forum
Blogs FAQ Calendar

Notices

User Tag List

Reply
Thread Tools
Unread 04/14/2018, 06:09 PM   #1
Scubajoe1
Registered Member
 
Scubajoe1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Raleigh, NC
Posts: 409
How long for Nitrate and phosphate to change?

So I have a 180 gallon with 22 fish. My phosphates and nitrates read 0 on the hanna ultra low phosphorus test and red sea kit respectively. I bumped up from 2 frozen cubes a day and 12"x6" of seaweed to the same seaweed but 4 cubes a day. 2 days now and still not shift in phosphates or nitrates. I am guessing the excess food if any will take 5 to 7 days to break down? How much do people usually feed 22 average fish on average? I know there are a ton of variables like the quality of filtration etc...

Thanks

Joe


__________________
Scubajoe

180 Gallon reef tank with coast to coast Herbie overflow. 60 Gallon sump with 9" filter sock. 36" lifereef skimmer, activated carbon filter. Emperor Aquatics 40W UV Sterilizer

Current Tank Info: 180 gallon reed tank, coast to coast overflow, herbie overflow. Life reef sump and 36" life reef skimmer, GHL Doser 2, Neptune Apex reef controller, Auto topoff, Spectrapure RO system with a Tunze RO controller. activated carbon and no more GFO.
Scubajoe1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 04/14/2018, 10:59 PM   #2
bertoni
RC Mod
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Mountain View, CA, USA
Posts: 88,616
That's going to be hard to estimate. I might give it another week before increasing the feeding, but I suspect that you would have seen an effect by now, unless the extra food is going into growing more small animals or maybe some sort of alga.


__________________
Jonathan Bertoni
bertoni is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 04/15/2018, 07:56 AM   #3
mcgyvr
Registered Member
 
mcgyvr's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 20,050
IMO it can take weeks to see a measurable effect from increasing feeding if at all..

Too many variables to how much to feed too..
big difference between 22 x 1" fish vs 22 x 10" fish,etc...

I'd have to ask why you are increasing feeding anyways? I'm going to assume that you noticed thinning of your fish? If not is there another reason other than just spending more money on food? Maybe you have corals and are having problems with them?


__________________
Who me?
mcgyvr is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 04/15/2018, 03:02 PM   #4
hkgar
Registered Member
 
hkgar's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Dewitt MI
Posts: 5,051
What are the fish you have?

I have a 180 with 14 fish and the 3 tangs alone will eat 1 large Romaine lettuce leaf and 1/2 sheet (4" x 8") of Nori. I feed two 3 grams frozen (home made) at 6PM and the auto feeder drops a pinch of pellets 3 times a day. My nitrates and phosphate (2 and .03) would rise significantly is I wasn't dosing carbon and using a algae scrubber.


__________________
Gary


180 gallon, 40 gallon sump, 3 250 W MH + 4 80W ATI T5's, MTC MVX 36 Skimmer, Apex controller Aquamaxx T-3 CaRx

Current Tank Info: A 2 Barred Rabbitfish, Red Head Salon, Yellow/Purple, McMaster Fairy, Possum, 2 Leopard Wrasses, Kole, & Atlantic Blue Tangs, 2 Percula Clown, 3 PJ and 1 Banggai Cardinalfish , Swallowtail, Bellus and Coral Beauty Angels
hkgar is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 04/15/2018, 06:06 PM   #5
Dan_P
Registered Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 1,432
Fish excrete ammonia. You can assume they don’t hold onto it for long. Ammonia is used to make biomass and serves as an energy source. Bacteria and phytoplankton are going to assimilate it quickly. The biochemistry is fast.

You will see nitrates when you exceed the systems capacity, which can increase of course, to assimilate ammonia and destroy nitrate. Since the denitrification process is a slow growth system, I guess it would be only a matter of be days for the system to start having a nitrate rise under an increasing feeding regime. Unfortunately, it might be weeks before reaching the detection level of our test kits.

Increase your feeding by a cube every 3-7 days and monitor your nitrates just before each increase, or some such scheme.


Dan_P is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 04/15/2018, 06:58 PM   #6
Scubajoe1
Registered Member
 
Scubajoe1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Raleigh, NC
Posts: 409
Quote:
Originally Posted by hkgar View Post
What are the fish you have?

I have a 180 with 14 fish and the 3 tangs alone will eat 1 large Romaine lettuce leaf and 1/2 sheet (4" x 8") of Nori. I feed two 3 grams frozen (home made) at 6PM and the auto feeder drops a pinch of pellets 3 times a day. My nitrates and phosphate (2 and .03) would rise significantly is I wasn't dosing carbon and using a algae scrubber.
21 fish total. 1-6" hippo. Two fairly large foxfaces, 3 anthias, scopus tang, sailfin tang, spotted mandarin, long nose hawk, 3 clowns, rainford goby, filefish, swallowtail angel, midas blenny. two solar wrasses, leopard wrasse, koi wrasse.

I also dose carbon source only 8 mL of Nopox a day


__________________
Scubajoe

180 Gallon reef tank with coast to coast Herbie overflow. 60 Gallon sump with 9" filter sock. 36" lifereef skimmer, activated carbon filter. Emperor Aquatics 40W UV Sterilizer

Current Tank Info: 180 gallon reed tank, coast to coast overflow, herbie overflow. Life reef sump and 36" life reef skimmer, GHL Doser 2, Neptune Apex reef controller, Auto topoff, Spectrapure RO system with a Tunze RO controller. activated carbon and no more GFO.
Scubajoe1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 04/15/2018, 07:00 PM   #7
Scubajoe1
Registered Member
 
Scubajoe1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Raleigh, NC
Posts: 409
Quote:
Originally Posted by mcgyvr View Post
IMO it can take weeks to see a measurable effect from increasing feeding if at all..

Too many variables to how much to feed too..
big difference between 22 x 1" fish vs 22 x 10" fish,etc...

I'd have to ask why you are increasing feeding anyways? I'm going to assume that you noticed thinning of your fish? If not is there another reason other than just spending more money on food? Maybe you have corals and are having problems with them?
Increasing feeding because more fish crap means more nutrients for my SPS coral. Also want to get my nitrates and phosphates on a measurable sale. Right now they are 0.


__________________
Scubajoe

180 Gallon reef tank with coast to coast Herbie overflow. 60 Gallon sump with 9" filter sock. 36" lifereef skimmer, activated carbon filter. Emperor Aquatics 40W UV Sterilizer

Current Tank Info: 180 gallon reed tank, coast to coast overflow, herbie overflow. Life reef sump and 36" life reef skimmer, GHL Doser 2, Neptune Apex reef controller, Auto topoff, Spectrapure RO system with a Tunze RO controller. activated carbon and no more GFO.
Scubajoe1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 04/18/2018, 05:47 PM   #8
Dan_P
Registered Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 1,432
I have a 40 gallon fish only tank. I recently tried feeding the fish whole clams and wasn’t very careful about amounts. NO3 went from undetectable to 0.6 ppm within 6 days. So, things can change quickly.


Dan_P is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 04/18/2018, 07:54 PM   #9
Uncle99
Crab Free Zone
 
Uncle99's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2017
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 2,906
Maybe half the NoPox dose to 4 or 5mls and measure each week?
That should elevate them...


Uncle99 is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 04/18/2018, 09:40 PM   #10
bertoni
RC Mod
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Mountain View, CA, USA
Posts: 88,616
I'd back off on the NOPOX. It's consuming nitrate and phosphate from the water column, if it's working at all.


__________________
Jonathan Bertoni
bertoni is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Tags
feeding, nitrates, phosphates


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On



All times are GMT -6. The time now is 12:35 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Powered by Searchlight © 2024 Axivo Inc.
Use of this web site is subject to the terms and conditions described in the user agreement.
Reef CentralTM Reef Central, LLC. Copyright ©1999-2022
User Alert System provided by Advanced User Tagging v3.3.0 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.