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Old 19-02-2008, 10:00 PM
ponds2u ponds2u is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Feb 2008
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 2
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Hi,

If the tank is left without fish the ammonia with be converted to nitrite and the nitrate as it would do with fish present as the bacteria that makes this process work feed on the ammonia that is currently present.

I would leave the tank for 4 days and then do a quater water change to get rid of any high levels of nitrate that may be left from the process and then add another fish.. by doing this you will still have plenty of bactria living in the tank to sustain the new fish.

Be ware : If you leave the tank for too long with no fish the bacteria that have accumilated will die due to the lack of food for them (ammonia) and you may well have problems again.

All of the above only applies to a tank that has a suitable filter in place.

Hope this helps

Dave



Quote:
Originally Posted by Stumpy View Post
I set up a small aquarium and used de-chlor. Waited a week and bought a
goldfish. After one week it had Ich, used malachite green and raised tank
temperature to 80 deg., it recovered. Then at it's 2 week mark the goldfish
looked ill and had its tail corroding - I assumed with tailrot. Took a
water sample to a petstore and wanted to buy an anti-biotic. The aquariaist
said that the sample had high ammonia and that it was not tailrot, would
not sell the antibiotic. The fish died that night.

http://fins.actwin.com/mirror/begin-cycling.html

My question is - with no fish in the tank to continue producing nitrogen,
will the cycle shown in the graph on the link above continue as depicted?
Or will the cycle be interrupted until I install a new fish to produce new
nitrogen? My preference would be to leave the tank alone until day 40 and
then feel much better about putting in a new fish.

Could not find a group where this would be on-topic, but it is related.