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Live Rock


Sparkypn

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5 or less is ideal, however many tanks run at up to 40. For fish, anything under 100 can work for a short time, provided you can reduce it to below 40 within a few weeks. For many corals, 20 or less is acceptable although some hardy ones will tolerate more.

BTW don't confuse nitrate with nitrite, for nitrite, level must be zero.

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Sorry to hijack your thread, Sparky, but

I have a tank that has been set up for twelve days with live rock that has been taken out of another tank which has been running for quite a while. It was kept out of water, but was still damp.

I didn't test the ammonia until it had been going for seven days, and it was zero then.

At the moment when tested we have Ammonia 0, Nitrite 0, Nitrate 10.

Has this cycled in such a short amount of time?

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Pretty likely the rock has remained cycled, just monitor nitrate & when that's stabilised you are ready to go.

Start stocking slowly.

What to stock first? Doesn't really matter from the cycling point of view as long as you build up slowly. From a fish aggression point of view, put the least aggresive fish in first so they can find their way around and get established. If you put the aggresive ones in first, they get to thinking the tank is theirs, and when you add a less aggressive one they attack it and death can result.

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